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LIBRARY  OF  CONGRESS 


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LIBRARY  OF  CONGRESS 


SELECT 
LIST  OF  REFERENCES 


ox   THE 


BRITISH  TARIFF  MOVEMENT 

(CHAMBERLAIN'S  PLAN) 


COMPILED  UNDER  THE  DIRECTION  OF 

APPLETON  PRENTISS  CLARK  GRIFFIN 

CHIEF     BIBLIOGRAPHER 


sk;co:n-jd   issue 

WITH   ADDITIONS 

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WASIlI.\(.r(»N 

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1906 

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L.  C.  card,  6-35016 


This  issue  contains  an  Appendix  giving  titles  of  writings  added  in  1904-1906,  with 
some  periodical  references  of  1903. 


1\  <>-x 


IXTRODUCTIOX  TO  FIRST  ISSUE.* 


This  List  is  intended  to  show  what  this  Library  contains  relative  to 
the  liscal  controversy  wliich  has  been  aj>itated  in  Great  Britain  since 
the  pronouncement  of  the  Honorable  Joseph  Chaml^erlain  in  favor 
of  the  preferential  treatment  of  the  colonies  in  trade  relations.  The 
authoritative  statement  of  the  Chamberlain  programme  is  found  in  his 
speeches  printed  under  the  title,  '"Imperial  union  and  tariff  reform," 
London,  1903.  S.  H.  Jeves's  ''Mr.  Chamberlain,  his  life  and  public 
career,"  London,  1903,  mav  also  be  consulted. 

An  important  contribution  to  the  literature  on  the  controversy  is 
"Economic  notes  on  insular  free  trade,"  by  the  Honoral)le  Arthur 
James  Balfour.  Prime  Minister.  The  Economic  Journal  expresses 
the  opinion  that  "For  different  reasons  these  'notes'  which  were  cir- 
culated by  the  Prime  ^Minister  to  his  colleagnes  in  the  Cabinet  in  the 
early  days  of  August  last,  seem  not  unlikely  to  take  a  prominent  place 
among  the  most  remarkable  of  English  State-papers."  Mr.  Balfour 
expressed  ({ualitied  concurrence  in  the  Chamberlain  plan.  He  advo- 
cated scrutiny  of  the  free-trade  dogma  and  its  effectiveness  in  present 
trade  conditions. 

The  Chamberlain  programme  finds  an  advocate  in  Professor  W.  J. 
Ashle}',  a  political  economist  of  the  historical  school,  in  his  work 
entitled  "Tariff  problems,"  London,  1904.  Professor  J.  S.  Nicholson, 
while  not  approving  Ashley's  thesis  states  in  a  review  pu])lished  in 
the  Economic  Journal  that  the  author  "seems  to  deserve  the  distinc- 
tion of  having  produced  the  best  book  on  the  Protectionist  side  of  tte 
controversy  now  I'aging." 

L.  G.  Chiozza-Money,  in  his  "Elements  of  the  ff  sea  I  problem," 
undertakes  to  reply  to  the  argun\ents  of  Ashley. 

Lord  Brassey's  "Fifty  years  of  progress  and  the  new  fiscal  policy" 
is  said  to  be  a  "business  like,  scientific,  and  common-sense  statement 
of  the  Free  Trade  position,  based  upon  official  statistics,  Blue  Books, 
and  speeches  of  leading  statesmen,  Biitish  and  Colonial." 

A  series  of  controversial  ai'ticles  by  Harold  Cox  and  E.  Vi.  Williams 
have  })een  brought  togcthei-  in  a  volume  entith^l  "Free  trade  /•.  pro- 
tection; a  fiscal  (hiel  between  Harold  Cox  and  Ei-ii(>st  E.  ^Villianls,  with 
an  introduction  by  L.  G.  Chiozza,"  London,  1903. 

*See  note  on  verno  of  litlc-page 


4  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

The  Avork  edited  b}'  H.  W.  Mas.singhain.  entitled  "Liibour  and  pro- 
tection; a  series  of  studies,"  is  a  collection  of  essays  intended  "  to  pre- 
sent a  simple  but  complete  nexus  of  argument  against  Mr.  Chamber- 
lain's protectionist  policy  from  the  point  of  view  of  labor/' 

The  doctrines  of  the  Manchester  school  are  represented  in  a  series  of 
selections  from  speeches  and  writings  of  its  founders  in  a  volume 
edited  l;\y  Francis  W.  Hirst,  London,  1903. 

A  free  trade  argument  based  on  statistical  history  from  1785  is  the 
work  b}'  G.  Armitage-Smith,  entitled  ""The  free  trade  moyement  and 
its  results,"'  London,  1903. 

W.  H.  Mallock,  in  his  work,  "The  fiscal  dispute  made  eas}^"  Lon- 
don, 1903,  passes  in  review  the  arguments  advanced  by  either  side. 
He  aims  to  make  clear  to  the  ordinary  mind  the  principles  which  are 
advanced  by  the  advocates  of  free  trade  on  the  one  hand,  and  protec- 
tion on  the  other. 

The  agitation  for  a  change  of  fiscal  policy  has  caused  the  preparation 
of  a  number  of  Parliamentary  blue  books  dealing  with  the  various 
phases  of  the  trade  relations  of  the  Empire.  These  are  noted  in  the 
list  under  Great  Britain.  In  some  respects  the  most  important  of 
these  documents  is  what  is  popularly  known  as  the  "Fiscal  blue  book" 
published  under  the  title,  "British  and  foreign  trade  and  indus- 
try. Memoranda,  statistical  tables,  and  charts,  prepared  in  the  Board 
of  trade  with  reference  to  various  matters  bearing  on  British  and 
foreign  trade  and  industrial  conditions."  London,  1903.  It  contains  a 
mass  of  statistical  information  in  regard  to  the  industrial  and  trade 
conditions  of  the  Empire.  Among  the  important  papers  may  be 
mentioned  the  following: 

"Imports  and  exports  of  manufactured  goods  into  and  from  the 
United  Kingdom,  with  notes  of  tariff  and  other  important  changes 
and  events  for  a  series  of  years;"  "Export  trade  of  the  United  King- 
dom to  protected  and  unprotected  foreign  countries  and  colonies  for  a 
series  of  years;"  "Value  of  foodstuffs  imported  from  foreign  coun- 
tries;" "Wheat  prices  in  the  United  Kingdom,  France,  Germany,  and 
the  United  States,  from  1810-1902;"  "Consumption  of  food  and  cost 
of  living  in  the  United  Kingdom  and  foreign  countries;"  "The 
export  policy  of  trusts  in  certain  foreign  countries;"  "  Statistics  on 
the  industrial  condition  of  the  United  Kingdom  and  certain  foreign 
countries;"  "  Imports  from  foreign  countries  into  the  self-governing 
colonies," 

Sir  Robert  Giffen's  "Economic  inquiries  and  studies,"  London, 
Bell,  1901,  was  published  too  late  to  be  entered  in  the  body  of  this 
list.  It  is  noted  here  because  of  the  high  standing  of  the  author  as  a 
writer  on  economics.  The  writer  claims  the  distinction  of  having 
debated  as  early  as  1871  an  imperial  tariff*  of  a  preferential  and  of  an 
incidentall}^  protective  nature. 


INTRODUCTIOIS'  0 

Professor  William  Graham  has  just  pul)lished,  through  Kegan  Paul, 
a  work  entitled  ''Free  trade  and  the  empire,"  "a  volume  in  which  the 
author  supports  certainly  a  two-shilling-,  and  possibly  even  a  four- 
shilling,  duty  on  wheat,  and  some  measure  (not  particularly  specitied) 
of  retaliation  and  of  opposition  to  dumping,  but  in  which  he  opposes 
what  he  describes  as 'an  indiscriminate  tax  of  10  per  cent,  on  the 
average  on  manufactures,  as  Mr.  Chamberlain  suggests.""' 

In  the  "•Edinburgh  review"  for  Januar3%  1004,  there  is  an  article 
on  the  tarift'  controversy,  using  as  a  text  Chamberlain's  "Imperial 
union  and  tariti'  reform,"  the  "Fiscal  blue  book,"  Ashle3'^'s  "Taritf 
problems,"  and  Pigou's  "Riddle  of  the  taritf." 

Among  the  writers  of  monographs  noted  in  the  bod}^  of  this  List 
who  support  the  Chamberlain  policy  are  Caillard,  whose  work  is  said 
by  a  critic  unfriendly  to  Caillard's  thesis  to  be  "a  reasoned  statement 
of  the  case  for  the  reversal  of  [the  British]  fiscal  policy,"  Byng,  Dale, 
Fell.  Gaskell,  Molesworth,  Pope,  and  Wilson. 

Fliirscheim  in  his  "Clue  to  the  economic  labyrinth"  argues  for  an 
imperial  protective  taritf'. 

"Imperial  reciprocitj""  is  a  series  of  articles,  grouped  under  the 
topics  "  The  retaliation  issue,"  "The  inquir}^,"  "Food  and  transfer  of 
taxation,"  presented  to  advance  the  cause  of  fiscal  reform. 

Among  the  writers  in  opposition  are  Chiozza-Money,  Cox,  McClel- 
land, Perris,  and  Pigou. 

Sir  John  Barnard  B3des's  work  is  "A  treatise  in  favor  of  protection, 
published  in  1849"  which  has  been  reprinted  with  an  introduction  and 
notes  by  W.  S.  Lilly  and  C.  S.  Devas  with  regard  to  the  present  fiscal 
controversy. 

Agac}',  in  his  work  entitled  "Free  trade,  protection,  dumping, 
bounties,  and  preferential  tarifts,"  discusses  in  a  few  chapters  the  issues 
of  the  fiscal  policy,  and  favors  modification  of  the  present  regulations 
without  destro\'ing  the  principles  of  free  trade;  decides  that  it  is  not 
desirable  to  abandon  free  trade  for  protection;  advises  countervailing 
duties  to  prevent  dumping,  and  a  preferential  treatment  which  will 
steer  clear  of  the  evils  of  protection,  with  a  resume  of  the  arguments. 
In  the  "P^conomic  journal"  it  is  stated  that  "the  chief  merit  of  the 
book  lies  in  the  presentation  with  a  due  sense  of  proportion  of  the 
principles,  ideas,  and  ideals  of  the  controversy  rather  than  in  a  final 
treatment  of  an}'  one  topic." 

The  periodical  press  has  teemed  with  articles  on  the  controversv.  and 
iiHjstof  them  have  taken  position  in  accordance  with  party  aftiliations. 
The  "Saturda}'  review"  has  been  a  consistent  supporter  of  the  Ciiani- 
berlain  scheme.  It  announces  in  an  advertisement  that  "its  polic}' 
is  the  policy  of  the  greatest  Secretary  of  State  the  Colonies  ever  had; 
and  is  supported  by  many  of  the  chief  dail^^  weekly,  and  monthly 
periodicals." 


6  LIBRAKY    OF    CONGRESS 

The  other  leading  weeklies,  the  Spectator  and  the  Speaker,  are  ranged 
with  the  opposition. 

The  f6llowing-  monthly  magazines  contain  articles  favorable  to  the 
Chamberlain  polic}':  "Blackwood's  Edinburgh  magazine,"  the  "Nine- 
teenth century  and  after,"  and  the  "National  review."  The  "Maga- 
zine of  Commerce,  an  illustrated  monthly  for  men  of  affairs,"  which 
is  devoted  to  "the  advancement  of  commerce,"  contains  numerous 
articles  in  favor  of  the  Chamberlain  plan. 

The  "Economic  review,"  London,  and  the  "Economic  journal, 
journal  of  the  Roj^al  Economic  Society,"  admit  articles  on  both  sides 
of  the  question. 

The  "Economist,"  "Fortnightly  review,"  "  Contemporary  review," 
"Edinburgh  review,"  "Independent  review,"  and  the  "Westminster 
review,"  are  on  the  side  of  the  opposition. 

Among  Chamberlain's  most  ardent  supporters  are  Sir  Gilbert  Parker, 
C.  Arthur  Pearson,  and  W.  A.  S.  Hewins.  The  present  List  contains 
references  to  magazine  articles  written  b}"  them  in  advocacy  of  the 
fiscal  policy.     The  index  will  direct  to  these  articles. 

Some  of  the  leading  magazine  writers  in  opposition  are  Augustine 
Birrell,  Winston  S.  Churchill,  Leonard  Courtne}",  Sir  Robert  Giff'en, 
G.  Shaw  Lefevre,  J.  A.  Spender,  and  Lucien  Wolf. 

Statistics  of  trade  are  given  in  the  following  official  publications  of 
the  British  government: 

"Annual  statement  of  the  trade  of  the  United  Kingdom  and  British 
possessions;"  "Monthh'  trade  and  navigation  accounts;"  "Monthly 
trade  and  navigation  accounts  of  foreign  countries  and  British  posses- 
sions;" "The  Board  of  trade  journal;"  "Statistical  abstract  for  the 
United  Kingdom  in  each  of  the  last  fifteen  years;"  "  Statistical  abstract 
for  the  several  colonial  and  other  possessions  of  the  United  Kingdom 
in  each  year;"  "Statistical  abstract  relating  to  British  India;"  "Sta- 
tistical abstract  for  the  principal  and  other  foreign  countries  in  each 
year." 

Elaborate  statistical  tables,  with  special  reference  to  present  fiscal 

conditions   in   Great   Britain,  are   printed  in   the   Financial  Reform 

Almanack. 

A.  P.  C.  Griffin, 

CJiief  Bibliographer. 
Herbert  Putnam, 

Librarian  of  Congress. 
Washington,  D.  C,  Aj)ril  23.,  lOOI/. 


LIST  OF  REFERENCES  ON  THE  BRITISH  TARIFF 

MOVEMENT 

(Chamberlain's  Plan) 


Agacy,  HoniT  A.     Free  trade,   protection,  dumping,   bounties  and 
preferential  tariffs. 
Lonqiaans^  Cheen,  and  co.^  London .,\etc.\  1903.    (6),  83  pp. 

Ashley,  William  James.     The  tariff  problem. 

London:  P.  S.  lung^  1903.     210pp.     Folded  tahles.     8^. 

"An  able  defence  of  Chamberlain's  policy  chiefly  on  the  following 
grounds:  (1)  the  efficacy  of  retaliation;  (2)  'anti-dumping;'  (3) 
the  slightness  of  the  prospective  burden  on  commerce. ' '  Quarterly 
jonrnal  of  economics,  vol.  IS:  312. 

ed.     British  industries.     A  series  of  general  reviews  for  busi- 
ness men  and  students. 
Longmans.,    Green.,   and  co.,    London,  \j:t('.\  1903.     xv,   (i), 
23-2  pp.     12^. 

Contexts:  The  British  iron  and  steel  industries:  their  conditions 
^  and  outlook,  by  Stephen  S.  Jeans;  The  ]\Iidland  iron  and  steel 

wages  board,  by  Daniel  Jones;  The  British  cotton  industry,  ])y 
Elijah  Helm;  The  woolen  and  worsted  industries  of  Yorkshire, 
by  Frederick  Hooper;  The  British  linen  and  flax  industry,  with 
special  reference  to  its  position  in  Ireland,  by  Sir  R.  Lloyd  Pat- 
terson; British  railways  as  business  enterprises,  by  Charles  H. 
Grinling;  British  shipping,  and  its  present  position,  by  Benedict 
W.  Ginsburg;  The  trust  movement  in  Great  Britain,  by  Henry 
W.  Macrosty. 

Balfour,  Arthur  James.     Economic  notes  on  insular  free  trade. 

^Veiv  Yor'k.,  London.^  [etc.]:  Longman.'^,  Green,  and  co.,  1905. 
32  pp.     8°. 

Bastable,  C.  F.     The  thcor}'  of  international  trade,  with  some  of  its 
applications  to  economic  policy. 
Lo/ido/t:     JLioniWni  d;  co..^  1903.     .wi,  197 p>p.     8^. 

"Governments  in  their  dealings  with  foreign  trade  should  be  guided 
by  the  much-vilifu'd  maxim  of  Laissez  faire."  Econ.  rev.,  Jan. 
15,  1904:  1^8. 

Brassey,  Thomas,  Ist  haron.     Fifty  years  of  progress  and  the  new 
liscal  policy. 
L(>ndon,{etc.\:  LongmanM,  Green.,  and  co..,  190 1^..    110  pp.    8^. 
Concludes  "that  a  return  to  protection  would  be  disastrous."" 

325:56—06 2 


8  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Buxton,  Sydiie}'.     A  handbook  to  political  (juestions  of  the  da}'  and  the 
arguments  on  either  side.     With  an  introduction.     11th  ed. 
London:  John  Murray,  1903.     xx.,  Ifli'^ jyp.     8°. 

Contains  special  chapters  on  Preference,  Retaliation,  Protection,  etc. 

Byles,  .^V>"  John  Barnard.     Sophisms  of  free  trade  and  popular  polit- 
ical economy  examined.     New  ed. 
London:  John  Lane.,  1903.     Ixi,  If2]^.2^p-     S^. 

"A  treatise  in  favor  of  protection,  published  in  1849.  The  editors, 
W.  S.  Lilly  and  C.  S.  Devas,  have  added  an  introduction  and 
notes,  which  are,  in  part,  concerned  with  the  j^resent  British  fiscal 
controversy."     Quarterly  journal  of  economics,  vol.  IS:  312. 

Byng,  G.     Protection:  the  views  of  a  manufacturer. 

London:  Eyre  and  Spottlswoode.,  1901.     xl,  {1).^255 j^p-     8^. 

Caillard,  Sh'  Vincent  Henry  Penalver.     Imperial  fiscal  reform. 

London:  Edward  Arnold,  1903.  xx,  288  2?p.  Folded 
table,     i^". 

Favors  preferential  trade  with  the  colonies. 

Chamberlain,  Joseph.     Imperial  union  and  tariff  reform.     Speeches 

delivered  from  May  15  to  Nov.  -l,  1903. 

London:    Grant  Richards,  1903.     xi,  211,  {1)  pj).     <S". 

Contents:  Introduction;  A  demand  for  injury;  The  case  for  tariff 
reform  and  Mr.  Chamberlain's  proposals;  Retaliation;  An  answer 
to  some  objections;  How  the  policy  affects  workingmen;  Results 
of  the  new  policy:  What  the  colonies  will  do;  The  policy  restated: 
How  it  affects  trade  unionism  and  shipping;  The  question  of 
employment;  A  reply  to  Lord  Goschen;  The  changed  conditions 
since  the  repeal  of  the  corn  laws. 

Chiozza-Money,  Leone  George.     British  trade  and  the  ZoUverein 
issue.     By  Leone  George  Chiozza. 

London:  The  ''  Commercial  intelligence'''' pidjlishing  co.,  ltd., 
1902.  {6),[9]-71  pp.  Folded  map.  Folded  diagram.  8^. 
{SeWs  "  Commercial  intellige^ice''''  handbooks,     no.  1.) 

Elements  of  the  fiscal  problem. 

London:  P.  8.  LUng  &  son,  1903.     237pp.     8°. 

"A  strikingly  successful  attempt  to  set  forth  the  free  trade  side  of 
the  British  fiscal  controversy."  Quarterly  journal  of  economics, 
vol.  IS:  312. 

Through  preference  to  protection.     An  examination  of  ]\Ir. 

Chamberlain's  fiscal  proposals. 
London:  Pidjlishedby  the  Free  trade  union,  1903.    SOj^p-    8°. 

Cobden,  Richard.     Speeches  on  questions  of  public  policy.     Edited 
by  John  Bright  and  James  E.  Thorold  Rogers. 
London:  JIacmilkm  and  co.,  limited,  1903.     vi,  {2),  622  pp. 
12'-. 


LIST    OF    KEFERENCES    ON    BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT  9 

Cox,  Harold.     The  policy  of  free  imports. 

London:    T.  Fixher  Unwin^  1903.     o^.  J)p.     8°. 

"Being  a  paper  read  at  Liverpool  on  Fel^ruary  16th,  1903,  to  the 
New  Century  Society." 

Cox,  Harold,  co^d  Ernest  E.  "Williams.  Free  trade  v.  protection;  A 
fiscal  duel  between  Harold  Cox  and  Ernest  E,  Williams, 
with  an  introduction  hy  L.  G.  Chiozza. 
London:  The  "  Commercial  intelligence''''  piibllsliing  co..,  1903. 
99  pp.  Portraits.  8^.  {^SeWs '''' Commercial  intelligence'''' 
JiaiidhooJcs.     no.  2.) 

Dale,  Bernard.     Free  imports;  wh}-  our  present  system  has  resulted 
in  transferring  a  large  portion  of  the  labouring  population 
of  the  United  Kingdom  to  foreign  countries  .  .   . 
London:  Effingltam  Wilson^  1903.     xi,  (1),  19  pp.     8°. 

Fell,  Arthur.     The  failure  of  free  trade  as  proved  by  the  foreign 
commerce  of  England. 
London:  Henry  J.  Drane,  [1903 f]     61pp.     16°. 

Fliirscheim,  ^lichael.     Clue  to  the  economic  labyrinth. 

London:  Swan    Sonnenschein  tk  co..,   [1903\     xvi.,   5J^7  pp. 
8°. 

"Free  trade  or  protection,"  pp.  257-292. 

Free  trade  union.     Handbook  to  the  taritf  question.     [2d  rev.  ed.] 

London:  Puhlished  hy  the  Free  trade  union.,  1903.     117.,  (3) 
pp.     8"^. 

Leaflets,     no.  1-29. 

London:  Puhlished  hy  the  Free  trade  union,  1903.     29  nos. 
8^. 

Gaskell,  Thomas  Penn.     Free  trade  a  failure  from  the  first. 

London:  Macmillan  and  co.,  1903.     ,r,  91  p)p.     F'olded  dia- 
grams.    <§''-'. 

G-reat  Britain.  Board  of  trade.  British  and  foreign  trade  and 
industry.  Memoranda,  statistical  tables,  and  charts,  pre- 
pared in  the  Board  of  trade  with  reference  to  various 
matters  bearing  on  British  and  foreign  trade  and  indus- 
trial conditions.  Presented  to  Parliament. 
London :  Eyre  and  Spottiswoode.,  1903.  xii.,  Ji.95  2U>-  Tahles. 
Diagrams.      Charts.     F°. 

Popularly  kii(»\vii  as  the  "Fincal  r.liic  hook." 

Canada  (Preferential  tai'ifi"  for  goods  from  the  United 

Kingdom).     Oidcred,   ])y   the   House  of  Commons,  to  1)C 
printed.     '.',  August,  iijoy.     A  \)\). 

(//i  ( ireat  I'rituiii.      I'arHniiicut.     Scsfjinnal  papers,  1!I0;?.     no.  ;nO. ) 


10  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

G-reat  Britain.  Board  of  trade.  Colonial  import  duties.  1002.  Re- 
turn relating-  to  the  rates  of  import  duties  levied  upon  the 
principal  and  other  articles  imported  into  the  colonies  and 
other  possessions  of  the  United  Kingdom.  Duties  in  force, 
so  far  as  notitied  to  the  Board  of  trade,  at  date  of  issue  of 
this  return,  November,  1902.     xi,  •ISO  pp.     8^. 

{In   Great   Britain.     Parliament.     Sessional  papers,  1902,  vol.  100. 
Cd.  1356.) 

Germanv.     New  general  customs  tariff.     Translation 

of  the  new  general  customs  tariff'  of  Germany,  with  com- 
parison as  far  as  possible,  of  the  rates  of  customs  duty  con- 
tained in  the  tariff'  with  the  rates  at  present  in  force  on 
imports  with  Germany-  from  the  United  Kingdom.  1003. 
102  pp. 
(/n  Great  Britain.     Parliament.     Sessional  papers,  1903.     Cd.  1479. ) 

Preferential  trade.     Return  to  an  order  of  the  honour- 


able the  House  of  Commons,  dated  2  July,  1003;  for.,  Return 
"showing  in  regard  to  those  countries  where  we  do  not 
enjoy  de  jure  or  de  facto  most-favoured-nation  treatment  the 
character  and  amount  of  the  advantages  granted  to  other 
countries;  showing  also  the  amount  of  British  trade  with 
such  countries  for  the  five.j^ears  preceding  and  the  five 
years  succeeding  the  date  when  the  differentiation  came 
into  force  in  each  case."  Ordered,  by  the  House  of  Com- 
mons, to  be  printed,  11  August,  1003.     11  pp. 

(/n  Great  Britain.     Parliament.     Sessional  papers,  1903.     no.  329. ) 

Trade  (Colonies  and  United  Kingdom).  Return  ' '  show- 
ing the  trade  of  the  various  British  colonies  and  possessions, 
inclusive  of  bullion  and  specie,  with  the  United  Kingdom, 
other  British  possessions,  and  foreign  countries  during  each 
of  the  years  1890-1000."  Ordered,  by  the  House  of  Com- 
mons, to  be  printed,  20  July,  1003.     15  pp. 

{In  Great  Britain.     Parliament.     Sessional  papers,  1903.     no.  262.) 

Translation  of  the  new  general  customs  tariff  for  the 


European  frontiers  of  Russia,  with  comparison,  as  far  as 
possible,  of  the  rates  of  customs  duty  contained  in  the 
tariff',  with  the  rates  at  present  in  foj'ce  on  imports  into 
European  Russia  from  the  United  Kingdom.  Presented  to 
both  houses  of  Parliament.     1003.     75  pp. 

(/n  Great  Britain.    Parliament.    Sessional  papers,  1903.    Cd.  1525.) 


LIST    OF    REFEEENCES    ON    BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT  11 

Great  Britain.  Board  of  trade.  Translation  of  the  proposed  new 
g-eneral  customs  tariff  for  Austria-Hungary,  with  compari- 
son, as  far  as  possible,  of  the  rates  of  customs  duty  contained 
in  the  proposed  tariff,  with  the  rates  at  present  in  force  on  the 
imports  into  Austria-Hungary  from  the  United  Kingdom. 
Presented  to  both  houses  of  Parliament.  11>03.  Ho  pp. 
(7»  Great  Britain.    Parliament.    Sessional  papers,  1903.    Cd.  1672. ) 

Colonial  office.     Colonial  conference,  1902.     Papers  relating 

to  a  conference  between  the  secretary"  of  state  for  the  colo- 
nies and  the  prime  ministers  of  self-governing  colonies; 
June  to  August,  1902.  Presented  to  both  houses  of  Par- 
liament, October,  1902.     xii,  155  pp. 

(/n  Great  Britain.    Parliament.    Sessional  papers,  1902.     0(1.1299.) 
"Board  of  trade  memorandum  on  effect  of  the  Canadian  preferen- 
tial tariff  on  trade  between  the  United  Kingdom  and  Canada," 
pp.  83-117;  "Canadian  memorandum  respecting  tlie  operation  of 
the  preferential  tariff,"  pp.  118-129. 

Cop3'  of  Canadian  sessional  paper  containing  corre- 
spondence in  connection  with  the  German  tariff.  Presented 
to  both  houses  of  Parliament,  August,  1903.     20  pp. 

(Jh.  Great  Britain.    Parliament.    Sessional  papers,  1903.    Cd.  1781.) 

Foreign  office.      Commercial,  no.  5  {190S).     Correspondence 

with  the  Governments  of  Belgium  and  Germany  as  to  their 
commercial  relations  with  Great  Britain  and  British  colo- 
nics. Presented  to  both  houses  of  Parliament,  July,  1903. 
vi,  45  pp. 

{In  Great  Britain.     Parliament.     Sessional  papers,  1903.    Cd.  1630. ) 

Parliament.      Debates  on  fiscal  ])olicv  in  Parliament,  May  28, 

1903-:March  3,  1904. 

(7/^  The  Parliamentary  debates,  4tli  ser.,  vols.  123-131.) 

Hillier,  Alfred.     Our  fiscal  system. 

(Ja   Royal    colonial    institute.     Proceedings,    vol.    35,    pp.    79-104. 
London,  1904.     8°.) 

Hirst,  Francis  W.,  ed.      Free  trade  and  other  fundamental  doctrines  of 
the  Manchester   school   set   t'oilh    in    selections   f rom .  the 
speeches  and  \\ritings  of  its  foundcis  and  followers. 
London  and  Neio  York:  llai'i><r  ct*  lirolln  /'.v,  190-i.     .wv,  (i), 

"Coloninl  niid  (i<cal  i.olicy,"  pj..  386-475. 

Imperial  reciprocity:  a  study  of  tiscal  jxdicy  in  a  series  of  articles^ 
revised  and  reprinted  from   llie  Daily  'relegi'a])li. 
London:  Office  of  the  Da  Hi/  Irlx/rajdi.  \l!)()-l\.     ,r.i\  113  2>j). 


12  LTBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Imperial  tariff  committee.     Trade  and  the  cnipirc. 

Biyiningham:  PuhUshed  hy  the  Tar  If  committee^  [1903],     29 
nos.     2  cartoons.     8°. 

Library  lias  nos.  1,  3-30,  incl.  13.  28  and  B.  29. 

A  (■olU'ction  of  leaflets  on  the  tariff  controversy  in  Great  Britain. 

The  Imperial  tariff  for  1903.  Containino'  the  laws  and  regulations 
o-overiiing  tlu^  importation  and  warehousing,  as  well  as  the 
exportatit)n  or  transhipment  of  all  kinds  of  merchandise. 
By  T.  E.  Olleilly. 

London:    Eyre   and   Spottiswoode^   \190S\      I,  783,  314-  VP' 
16°. 

India.     Government.     East  India  (tariffs).     Views  of  the  government 
of  India  on  the  ([uestion  of  preferential  tariffs.     Presented 
to  both  houses  of  Parliament. 
London,  190  J^.      ',9  pp.     F°. 

(Jn  Great  Britain.     Parliament.     Sessional  papers,  1903.     Cd.  1931.) 

Jeyes,  Samuel  Henr3\     Mr.  Chamberlain,  his  life  and  public  career. 
London,    \etc.^\:     Sands   cfc   eo.,    1903.      \iii\-xxxii,    803,    (1) 
pp.     8°. 

Knight,  AVilliam.  Reciprocity  in  trade  the  empire's  safeguard. 
No.  1.     Preferential  colonial  tai'ift's. 

London:    ^V.  Ileinemann,  1903.     58 pp.     I'lP. 

McClelland,  James.     The  fiscal  problem;  with  diagrams. 

London:    T.  Flxher  Un win,  1903.     vn,{l),87/p.     W. 

Mallock,  William  Hurrell.  The  fiscal  dispute  made  easy:  or,  A  key 
to  the  principles  involved  in  the  opposite  policies. 

London:  Evele'tgli  NasK  1903.     vi,  102 pp.     12°. 

Massingham,  H.  AV.,  ed.  Labour  and  protection;  a  series  of  studies. 
London :   T.  Fisher  Unwin,  1903.     xxiii,  {1),  322,  {1)2>L-     ^-"• 

Contents:  Preface;  Political  dangers  of  protection,  by  John  Burns; 
Protection  as  a  working-class  policy. — 1.  The  general  case,  by 
J.  A.  Hobson;  2.  Protection  and  wages,  by  J.  A.  Hobson;  In 
the  days  of  protection. — 1.  By  George  Jacob  Holyoake;  2.  How 

.  the  workers  lived;  The  workman's  cupboard,  by  Thomas  Lough; 
The  co-operative  housewife,  by  Rosalind  Nash;  The  people  on  the 
margin,  by  B.  Seebohm  Rowntree;  Protection  in  the  staple 
trades,  by  George  N.  Barnes;  An  object  lesson  from  Germany, 
by  W.  Harbutt  Dawson. 

"  The  object  of  the  following  essays  is  to  present  a  simple  but  com- 
plete nexus  of  argument  against  Mr.  Chamberlain's  Protectionist 
policy,  from  the  point  of  view  of  lab<"Air."     Pre f nee. 

Mr.  Chamberlain's  proposals.  The  question  of  preferential  tariffs. 
Protection  v.  Free  trade.     Facts,  figures,  and  arguments. 

London:   ^Vestminster  gazette,  1903.     If". 


LIST    OF    REFEREKCES    0:N'    BRITISH    TARIFF   MOVEMENT         13 

Moles"worth,  Si?'  Guilford  L.     Our  empire  under  protection  and  free 
trade.     With  diagrams. 
Ward^  Lockdbco.^  limited,,  London,,  [etc.'],,  1902.     125 2)p.    IG^. 

Mongredien,  Aug-ustus,     History  of   the  free    trade    movement  in 
England.     A  new  ed. .  with  introductor}"  and  supplementary 
chapters  by  the  Rev.  Dr.  H.  de  B.  Gibbins. 
London,  Paris  db  JleIbon)'?u':    Oasselt  c5  «/.,  li/nited,  1897. 
xii,  [13]-200jjp,     12-. 

Perris,  Georg-e  Herbert.     The  protectionist  peril.     An  examination 
of  Mr.  Chamberlain's  proposals. 
Methuen  i&co..  London,  1903.     vii,  (1),  IJtS pp.     12^. 

Pigou,  A.  C.     The  riddle  of  the  tariff. 

London:  Johnson^  1903.     107  j) p.     8^. 

Pope,  J.  Buckingham.     The  curse  of  Cobden  and  the  worship  of 
Diana.     New  ed. 
London:  Duckworth  and  co..,  1903.     viii^  {ID.,77  pp.     12°. 

Root,  J.  W.     The  trade  relations  of  the  British  empire. 

Liverpool:  J.   TF.  Root.,  1903.     ayvi,  J^31  p)p.     8'^'. 

Contains  chapters  on  "The  basis  of  customs  union;"  "The  Cana- 
dian preferential  tariff." 

Smith,  George  Armitage-.     The  free  trade  movement  and  its  results. 
2d  ed. 
London:  Blackie  c6  son,  1903.     276  pp.     12°.     {The  Victo- 
rian ei^a  series.) 

The  Speaker,  the  Liberal  review.     Supplement. 

London,  1903-190  k. 

Began  publication  July  18,  1908,  as  The  Free  trade  circular;  name 
changed  after  the  second  issue  to  Supplement  to  the  Speaker. 
Free  trade  paper,  issued  with  The  Speaker,  and  given  np  to  the 
tariff  (juestion. 

United  States.  Jjureau  of  statistics  {Treasui-i/  dcjxniinent).  Modern 
(a rill  systems.  The  maxinuun  and  mininuun,  conventional, 
and  general  tariff'  systems  of  the  principal  countries  of  the 
world. 

Washington:    Government  printing  ojfflce,  1902.      Hi,  3095- 
3168  2)p.     -^°. 

"  From  the  Sunuiiarv  of  commerce  and  finance  for  February,  1902." 

'  Vince,  Charlos  Anthony,     Mr.  Chamberlain's  pi'oposals:  what  they 
n)can  and  what  w(?  shall  gain  by  them.      With  a  ])roface  by 
the    Right    lion,    floscpli    Chamberlain,    M.    1*.       Third 
impression. 
London:    Grant  RicJuirds,  1903.     viii,  86,  {£) pp.     8°. 


14  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Willoughby,  F.  S.  Suggestions  for  securing  fair  play  for  British 
manufactures  lirst,  and  ultimately  securing  preferential 
trade  between  the  various  portions  of  the  British  empire. 

Manchester:    Collins  db  Kingston,  1903.     8^. 

Wilson,  H.  W.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  now  policy.     Fifty  years  of  free 
trade  and  the  result. 
London:   Swan  Sonnenschein  dn  co.,  ltd.,  190 J.     32pp.     5°. 


BRITISH   TARIFF   MOVEMENT:    ARTICLES   IN 

PERIODICALS 


1901.     The  outlook  for  British  trade.     H.  E.  Roscoe. 

Monthly  review,  vol.  2  {Fd..  1001):  GO-SI;    vol.    3    {Jlay, 
1001):  40-53. 

1901.  The  alleged  economic  decay  of  Great  Britain.     W.  H.  Mallock. 

^[oriiJihj  revieiv.,  vol.  I/.  {Sej}t.,  1001):  21-3o. 

1902.  British  commerce,  1S81-1900.     J.  Holt  Schooling. 

2Io)ifhly  review,  vol.  6  {J<iv.,  1002):  JiO-57. 

1902.     Free  trade  or  protection  for  England  i     A  plea  for  reconsid- 
eration.    John  Beattie  Crozier. 
Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  71  (Jfor.  1,  1002):  1^:27-1^33. 

1902.     The  approaching  abandonment  of  free  trade.     J.  A.  Hobson. 

Fortnightly  revieio,  v.  s.,  vol.  71  {Mor.  i,  1002):  J^Ji^-Jf-'ilf.. 

1902.     Foreign  trade  and  home  markets.     Vincent  Caillard. 
National  review,  vol.  30  (Jfr/r.,  1002):  51-77. 

1902.     The  commercial  needs  of  the  empire.     E.  J,  Dillon. 
Contemjjorary  review,  vol.  81  {April,  1002):  1^7-4^1. 

1902.     Some  suggestions  towards  an   imperial  taritf.     Vincent  Cail- 
lard. 
National  review,  vol.  30  {Ajyril,  1002):  200-227. 

1902.     The  dream  of  a  British  Zollverein.     Sir  Kobert  Gifi'en. 

Nijieteenth  century  and  afte7\  vol.  51  {May.,  1002):  603-705. 

1902.     The    promotion    of   trade    within    the   empire,     tlohn    B.    C. 
Kershaw. 

Monthly  review,  vol.  7  {June,  1002):  50-78. 

1902.     "The  dream  of   a  British  Zollverein:'"  a  reply  to  Sir  Rol)ert 
Giti'en.     Vincent  Caillai'd. 
National  review,  vol.  30  {June,  1002) :  507-605. 

1902.     Preferential  tariffs  within  the  empire.     A  reply  to  Sir  llo])ert 
Gifi'en.     Henry  Bircheuough. 

Nineteenth,  century  and  oft, r,  vol.  51  (June,  1002):  801-800. 

1902.     How  to  I'uin  a  free-trade  nation.     -lohii  Beattie  Crozier. 
Fortnightly  review,  n.  .s-.,  vol.  72  {July  /,  1002):  32-51. 

15 
325.36—06 3 


16 


LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 


1902.     The  economic  taproot  of  imperialism.     J.  A.  Hobson. 

Content porar II  review,  vol.  82  {Aug.,  1902):  219-232. 

1902.     The  promotion  of  trade  within  the  empire:     A  repl}^  to  Mr. 
Kershaw.     R.  H.  Brand. 

Monthly  review^  vol.  8  {Aug.,  1902):  56-72. 

1902.     A  natural  outcome  of  protection.     Walter  F.  Ford. 

Eeonomic  revieiv,  vol.  12  {Oct.  15,  1902):  385-398. 

1902.     Free  trade  in  danger.     George  Martineau. 

Hevj  liberal  review,  vol.  I^.  {Nov.,  1902):  }^![)6-~j03. 

1902.  An    imperial    Zollverein    with    preferential    tariffs.     C.    F. 

Bas  table. 
Economic  journal,  vol.  12  {Dec,  1902):  507-513. 

1903.  The  natural  outcome  of  free  trade.     G.  Byng. 

Econonilc  review,  vol.  13  {Jan.,  1903):  J^o. 

Reply  to  article  by  W .  F.  Ford  in  Economic  review  for  October,  1902. 
"It  is  the  object  of  the  present  article  to  show  that  the  natural  out- 
come of  free  trade  is  the  decline  of  British  industries." 

1903.     Trade  relations  within  the  empire.     Vincent  Caillard. 
Empire  review,  vol.  5  {Feb. ,  1903) :  19-28. 

1903.     The  colonial  office  conference  and  preferential  trade  within 
the  empire.     John  B.  C.  Kershaw. 

Fell  dell's  magazine,  vol.  8  {Feb.,  1903):  155-161. 

1903.     Free  trade  and  its  critics.     A,  C.  Pigou.  ^ 

Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  73  {ITar.,  1903):  54^-554- 

1903.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  new  chapter.     Edward  Salmon. 

Fortnightly  revieiv,  n.  s.,  vol.  73  {Apr.,  1903):  638-64^. 

1903.     The  demerits  of  our  fiscal  poIic3\     G.  Byng. 

Magazine  of  commerce,  vol.  2  {May,  1903):  273-277. 

1903.     Free  trade  and  its  defenders.     Vincent  Caillard. 
National  review,  vol.  41  {^ciy-,  1903):  4'^0-4^34'. 

1903.     Free  trade  or  empire? 

Satnrday  review,  vol.  95  {May  30,  1903):  672-673. 

1903.     The  new  mercantilism,  or  ditierential  free  trade.     Scrutator. 

Speaker,  n.  s.,  vol.  8  {May  30,  1903):  202-203. 

1903.     Premier  Balfour  on  tariff  retaliation. 

Commercial  and  financial  chronicle,  vol.  76  {June  27,  1903): 
1378-1380. 

1903.     Germany  and  Canada.     E.  J.  Dillon, 

Contemporary  review^  vol.  83  {June,  1903) :  876-884: 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT:    ARTICLES    IN   PERIODICALS        17 


1903.     The  Canadian   view  of  Mr.  ChamlxM-lain's  preferential  tariff 
.suggestions. 
Economist  {Dmdon),  col.  01  {June  20,  1903):  1081-1082. 

1903.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  new  chapter.     C.  Kinloch-Cooko. 
Enipirc  review^  vol.  5  [Jiau .,  190 J):  Ji.If,7-Jfi)3. 

1903.     Why  Canada  should  he  granted  a  preference  in  the  markets 
of  Great  Britain.     Albert  ."^windlehurst. 
Empire  review.,  vol.  5  {June,  1903):  li.92-lf99. 

1903.     The  colonics  and  imperial  defence.     A.  W.  A.  Pollock. 
JlacmiUaiCs  magazine.^  vol.  88  {June.,  1903):  99-10 J/,. 

1903.     The  antidote  for  Chamberlain. 

yafi<m,  vol.  76  {June  ^,  1903):  I^BO-J^ol. 

1903.     The  influence  of  free  trade  on  wages.     G.  Byng. 
Xational  review,  vol.  J^l  {June.,  1903):  Gl^d-GGl. 

1903.     Die  britische  Zollverein.     M.  Beer. 

Xeue  Ztit,  21.  Jahrg.,  vol.  2  {June  6,  1903):  293-300. 

1903.     Imperial  reciprocit3\       I.   Herbert  Maxwell.     II.   Sir  Gilbert 
Parker.     III.  Benjamin  Taylor. 

Nineteenth  century  <ijid  after.,  vol.  53  {June,  1903):  897-90'); 
906-910;  911-917. 

1903.     Imperial  and  foreign  trade:  two  views. 

J 'uhlic  opinion  {London),  vol.  83  {June  26,  1903):  816-818. 

1903.     The  imperial  Zollverein  policy. 

li'  i'i<  tv  of  revieivs  {London),  vol.  27  {June,  1903):  573-o7o. 

1903.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  attack  upon  free  trade. 

lieciew  of  recifws:  {London)^  vol .  27  {•T\ine,  1903):  631-633. 

1903.     The  position  of  the  government. 

Speaker,  n.  .s-.,  vol.  8  {June  13,  1903):  2Jt5-^Ifi. 

1903.     The  m3'stery  of  the  corn  tax  solved. 

Speaker,  n.  .v.,  vol.  8  {June  13,  1903):  2J^6-2I^7. 

1903.     The  new  mercantilism  or  difleicntial  free  trade.     Scrutator. 
Speaker,  n:  .v.,  vol.  8  {June  13,  1903):  2^7-21^8. 

1903.     Protection  and  the  working  classes.     F.  Maddison. 
Speaker,  n.  ,s-.,  vol.  8  {June  13,  1903):  2J^S-2Jf.9. 

1903.     Canadian  and  German  tariff  war.     Scrulator. 
Speaker,  n.  .s.,  vol.  8  {June  27,  1903):  291-'a 

1903.     The  duty  of  imperialist  free-traders. 
Spectator,  vol.  90  {June  6,  1903):  884. 


18 


LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 


1903.     "Bleeding-  to  death." 

Spectator,  vol.  DO  {June  27,  1903):  1022-1028. 

1903.     The  new  i)rotection. 

SpeGtator,  vol.  90  {June  27,  1903):   1028. 

1903.     Preferential  treatment  of  the  colonies. 

StatiM,  vol.  ol  {June  6,  1903):  1213-121]^,. 

1903.     England's  new  conditions. 

American   iHonthly  review  of  remews,  vol.  28  {July,  1903): 

18-22. 

1903.     Britain's  imperial  ZoUverein  policy. 

Ajnerican   monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  28  {July.,  1903): 

8J^~87. 

1903.     A  self-sustaining-  empire. 

BlacJcwood- 8   Edlnhurgli   magazine,    vol.    17 Ip   {July,    1903): 
l]p5-16Ip,. 

1903.     The  cabinet  and  the  empire.     R.  B.  Haldane, 

British  empire  revieiv,  vol.  6  {July,  1903) :  10-19. 

1903.     Preferential  tariffs — some  pros  and  cons. 

British  empire  review,  vol.  5  {July,  1903):  33-36. 

1903.  Mr.  (.yhamberlain's  proposals  and  their  reception  in  Great 
Britain:  the  European  cotton  goods  markets. 

Commercial  and  financial  chronicle,  vol.  77  {July  18,  1903) : 
IL't-llG. 

1903.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  fiscal  policy.     Lord  AVelby. 

Contemporary  review,  vol.  8^  {July,  1903) :  1-11. 

1903.     The  proposed,  new  fiscal  polic3^     L.  P.  Phelps. 

Economic  review,  vol.  13  {July  lo,  1903) :  327. 

1903.     The  Canadian  preferential  tariff. 

■  Econoonist  {London),  vol.  61  {July  .|,  1903):  1179-1180. 

1903.  Our  commercial  relations  and  fiscal  policy.  I.  The  late  Lord 
(yarnarvon's  views.  Sir  Robert  G.  W .  Herbert.  11.  From 
the  French  standpoint.     Charles  Lyon.. 

Empire  review,  vol.  6  {July,  1903):  561-557. 

1903.  Preferential  tariffs  and  Mr.  Chamberlain.  1.  jNIr.  Ch^im- 
berlain's  programme  in  the  light  of  French  experience. 
Yves  Guyot.  11.  Cobdenism  and  capital.  Calchas.  III. 
Setting-  back  the  clock  of  empire.  Diplomaticus,  \ pio'ud. 
Lucien  Wolf].  IV.  Free  trade  or  protection  ?  John  Beattie 
Crozier. 
Emtnightly  reciew,  ».  s.,  vol.  74  {July  l^  1903):  1-GG. 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT:    ARTICLES    IX    PERIODICALS       19 


1903.     The  tariti'  problem  in  England. 

Gimtoii's  magazine^  vol.  2-5  (Jx/t/,  1903):  8-15. 

1903.     Representative  opinion.s  on  preferential  tariffs. 
Iron  age,  vol.  72  {July  9,  1903):  33-30. 

1903.     Le  programme  do  M.  Chamberlain.     Yves  Guyot. 

Journal  des  economistes,  62^  annee  {July  15,  1903):  3-27. 

1903.     The  colonies  and  imperial  defence:  a  rc^joinder.     Arthur  H. 
Loring. 
Ifacmillan's  magazine,  vol.  88  {July,  1903):  218-218. 

1903.     Our  fiscal  policy.     Francis  Franklin. 

Magazine  of  comrnerce,  vol.  3  {July,  1903):  1-2. 

1903.     A  brief  review  of  recent  protectionist  pleas.     Elijah  Helm. 

Magazine  of  commerce,  vol.  3  {July,  1903):  3-6. 

1903.     Should  free  trade  be  worshipped?     Mr.  Helm's  article  replied 
to,  with  some  further  arguments  in  support  of  Mr.  Cham- 
berlain's proposals.     Gr.  B^'ng. 
Magazine  of  commerce,  vol.  3  {July,  1903) :  8-12. 

1903.     ''The  demerits  of  our  fiscal  policy." 

Magazine  of  commerce,  vol.  3  {July,  1903):  13-16. 

1903.     Mr.  Ch&mberlain's  proposals.     Viscount  Goschen. 
Monthly  review,  vol.  12  {July,  1903) :  38-55. 
Living  age,  vol.  238  {Aug.  15,  1903):  398-1^08. 

1903.     Free  trade  and  preferential  tariffs,     lialph  Neville. 
Montldy  review,  vol.  12  {July,  1903):  56-63. 

1903.     British  fiscal  policy:  a  plea  for  incpiiry.     C.  A.  Cripps. 

National  revieiv,  vol.  Jf,l  {Jaly,  1903) :  758-769. 

1903.     Breferential  trade.     Alfred  Emmott. 

Nnr  liheral  review,  vol.  5  {Juhj,  1903):  7^3-755. 

1903.     The  colonial  view.     E.  T.  Cook. 

Nev)  liheral  revieir,  vol.  5  {July,  1903):  756-764-. 

1903.     A  colonial  point  of  view.      Arthur  II.  Achuns. 

N'er/j  liheral  review,  vol.  5  {July,  1903):  765-768. 

1903.     "Ties  of  interest.''     L.  Chio/za  Money. 

yi'W  liheral  review,  vol.  5  {July,  1903):  769-775. 

1903.     The  new  departure  and  liow  to  meet  it.     J.  A.  Rjiender. 
X';u^  liheral  review,  col.  5  {July,  1903):  776-781. 

1903.      riic  failure  of  ])rotecti<in  in  I'^aiice.     A  \\aniiiig  to  England. 
Frederic  Lees. 

New  liheral  reciac,  col.  5  {July,  1903):   787-791^,. 


20 


LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 


1903.     The  opposition  to  the  proposals  of  Mr.  Chamberhiin. 

New  liberal  revieio^  vol.  5  {Jult/,  1903) :  795-818. 

T.  ^Ministerialist  objections.  II.  Labour  objections.  III.  Special 
interviews:  Sir  Charles  Dilke;  Henry  Broadhurst;  Sir  John 
Gorst. 

1903.     Imperial  policy  and  free  trade.     I.  Sir  Robert  Giti'en.     II. 
Edward  Dice}'.     III.  Benjamin  Kidd. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after.,  vol.  5Jf.  {July.,  1903) :  1-5 J/,. 

1903.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  scheme.     Harold  Cox. 

No7'th  American  review.,  vol.  177  [July.,  1903):  1-11. 

1903.     Imperial  trade  and  tariffs.     Benjamin  Taylor. 

Pagers  magazine.,  vol.  3  {July,  1903) :  65-70. 

1903.     British  foreign  trade  in  1902.     J.  W.  Hoot. 
Protectionht,  vol.  15  {July,  1903):  799-803. 

1903.     British  preferential  trade.     [Mr.  Chamberlain's  speech.] 
Protedionkt,  vol.  15  {July,  1903):  807-811. 

1903.     England's  momentous  problem.     F.  C.  Chappell. 
Protectionist,  vol.  15  {July,  1903):  816-817. 

1903.     The  tariff  contest  in  Britain. 

Protectionist,  vol.  15  {July,  1903):  838-84,2.    . 

1903.     The  grand  inquest  of  the  nation. 

Public  oj?i?iio?i  {London),  vol.  84  {July  3,  1903):  6-9. 

1903.     Tariffs  and  parties.     Not  a  "Little  England  v.  imperialist" 
issue. 
Piihllc  opinion  {London),  vol.  84  {July  10,  1903):  41-4^- 

1903.     Fiscal  policy  and  part}^  loyalty. 

Saturday  revieto,  vol.  96  {July  4-,  1903):  6-7. 

1903.     A  word  about ' '  dumping-. '' 

Speaher,  n.  s.,  vol.  8  {July  11,  1903):  3-35-336. 

1903.     The  colonies  and  Mr.  Chamberlain's  proposals. 
Spectator,  vol.  91  {July  11,  1903):  45-46. 

1903.     The  new  protection.     [Letters  to  the  editor.] 
Spectator,  vol.  91  {July  11,  1903):  52-55. 

1903.     Preferential  treatment  of  the  colonies. 
StcJist,  vol.  52  {July  11,  1903):  59-61. 

1903.     The  facts  about  preferential  trade. 

Worlds s  work  {London),  vol.  2  {July,  1903):  157-160. 

1903.     Fiscal  policies  in  l'J03. 

Blacl'ioood'' s   Ediiiburgh   magazine,  vol.    174  {Aug.,    1903): 
277-300. 


BRITISH    TARIFF   MOVEMENT:    ARTICLES    IN   PERIODICALS       21 


1903.     Imperialists  of  j^esterday  and  to-morrow.     John  A.  Cooper. 
CaiwdJan  macjazme,  vol.  SliAxr/.,  1903):  297-306. 

1903.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  balloon.     Leonard  Courtne3\ 

Coniemporary  revieic,  vol.  SJf.  {Aug..,  1903):  265-279. 

1903.     Imperial  reciprocity.     Herbert  Maxwell.     Sir  Gilbert  Parker. 
Benjamin  Taylor. 
Eclectic  magazine^  vol.  11^,1  {Aug.,  1903):  11/ 1-156. 

1903.  Preferential  tariffs  and  Mr.  Chamberlain.  I.  Cobdenism  and 
the  colonies.  Calchas.  II.  The  proposed  reversal  of  Eng- 
lish commercial  polic}'.  Lujo  Brentano.  III.  Free  trade 
and  home  rule.     Edward  Dicej". 

Fortnightly  review^  n.  s.,  vol.  7^  {Aug.  1,  1903):  193-231. 

1903.     Imperial  policy  and  free  trade.     Edward  Dicey. 
Livhig  age,  vol.  238  {Aug.  8,  1903):  34.5-357. 

1903.     The  colonies  and  imperial  defence.     A.  W.  A.  Pollock. 
Macmillan's  magazine,  vol.  88  {Aug.,  1903):  286-289. 

1903.     Protection  or  free-trade?     Perc}^  F.  Rowland. 

Macraillan^s  magazine,  vol.  88  {Aug.,  1903):  255-261. 

1903.     The  fiscal  question. 

Magazine  of  commerce,  vol.  3  {Aug. ,  1903) :  94-99. 

1903.     The  chano-inf;:  order.     S.  L.  Bensusan. 

Magazine  of  commerce,  vol.  3  {Aug.,  1903):  107-109. 

1903.     Mr.  Byng's  repl}'  to  a  South  Wales  critic. 

Magazine  of  commeixe.,  vol.  3  {Aug.,  1903):  164-165. 

1903.     Le  protectionnisme  imperialiste  anglais  et  les  interets  agricoles 
de  la  France.     D.  ZoUa. 
Monde  economique,  13^  annee  {Aug.  29,  1903):  259-260. 

1903.     The  position  of  the  unionist  free  traders.     Henr}-  Ilobliouse. 
Monthly  revieu\  vol.  12  {Aug.,  1903):  55-61. 

1903.     Imperial  trade  and  tariffs.     Hugh  Bell. 

Monthly  rev iev),  vol.  12  {Aug.,  1903):  62-73. 

1903.     Free  traders  at  bay.     Ernest  E.  Williams. 

Natiomd  re}riew,  vol.  41  {Aug..  1903):  930-940. 

1903.     The  revolt  against  Cobdenism.      II.  W.  Wilson. 
National  review,  vol.  41  {Aug.,  1903):  941-949. 

1903.     The  cabinet  empirics.     J.  H.  Yoxall. 

N(m  liheral  review,  vol.  6  {Aug.,  19UJ):  14-22. 

1903.     (Icrmany  and  Canada.     Andrew  Caird. 

Ncu)  liberal  revieu:,  vol.  0  [Aug.,  1903):  23-27. 


22  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

1903.     ]Mr.  Cham])erlain's  proposals.     Sir  -Tohn  E,  Gorst. 

North  American  review^  vol.  177  {An<j.^  J 903):  161-171. 

1903.     The  proposed  British  Zollv^erein.     Archibald  R.  Cokpihoun. 

North  American  review,  vol.  177  (A  >/(/.,  lOO.J):  172-182. 

1903.     Mr.  Chamberlain'.simperialtarilFplan.     Henr3'Loomis Nelson. 

North  American  revievj,  vol.  177  {Aikj.,  1903):  183-191. 

1903.     Are  the  colonies  forcing  England  into  a  Zollverein?     F.  C. 
Chappell. 

Protection int,  vol.  15  {Aug.,  1903):  862-863. 

1903.     England's  tariff  educational  campaign. 

Protectionist,  vol.  15  {Aioj.,  1903):  86^-870. 

1903.     The  passing  of  free  trade.     John  F.  Scanlan. 

Protectionist,  vol.  15  {Aur/.,  1903):  890-893. 

1903.     Preferential  trade  in  its  relation  to  Canada  and  the  empire. 
George  W.  Ross. 
Canadian  niagazine,  vol.  21  {Sept.,  1903):  J^ll-J^.16. 

1903.     To  unionists  and  imperialists.     A.  V.  Dicey. 

Contemporary  review,  vol.  8Jf  {Sept.,  1903):  305-317. 

1903.     The  inner  meaning  of  protectionism.     J.  A.  Hobson. 

Contemporary  revieio,  vol.  81f.  {Sept.,  1903):  365-37 Jf,, 

1903.     The  fiscal  enquiry.     J.  W.  Root. 

Economic  journal,  vol.  13  {Sept.,  1903):  293-302. 

1903.     Statistical  methods  and  the  fiscal  controversy.    A.  L.  Bowley. 

Economic  journal,  vol.  13  {Sept.,  1903):  303-312. 

1903.     The  effect  of  export  and  import  duties  on  price  and  production 
examined  by  the  graphic  method.     H.  Cunjnighame. 

Economic  journal,  vol.  13  {Sept.,  1903):  313-323. 

1903.     Canada  and  the  German  tariff. 

Economist  {London),  vol.  61  {Sept.,  1903):  153 J^- 1535. 

1903.     L'aventure  de  M.  Chamberlain.     Paul  Leroy-Beaulieu. 

l^conondste  frani^ais,  3P  annee,  vol.  2  {Sept.  26,  1903):  J^29- 
Jf31. 

1903.     Free  trade  and  its  fruits.     J.  A.  Spender. 

Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vd.  7.'^,  {Sept.,  1903):  391-J^ll. 

1903.     The  eve  of  the  campaign.     Calchas. 

Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  7J^  {Sept.,  1903):  J42-J,Si7. 

1903.     An  American  view  of  Mr.  Chamberlain's  proposals.     Robert 
Ellis  Thompson. 

Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  7Jf.  {Sept.,  1903):  466-473. 


BEITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT:    ARTICLES    IN    PERIODICALS        23 


1903. 

1903. 
1903. 
1903. 


1903.     Canada's  second  thouobt  on  a  ])reference.     John  Davidson. 
Fort)iightJy  revieir,  'u.  .v..  vol.  7J+  (Sej^f.,  1003):  ^74.-4 75. 

1903.     British  comments  on  ]\lr.  Chamberlain's  tiscal  policy. 
Harper's  loeeMy.  roL  47  {Sc:2)t.  12,  1903):  UG0-U70. 

1903.     The  future  of  the  British  iron  trade  as  affected  by  pending 
taritf  proposals. 
h'on  and  coal  trades  review:,  vol.  67  {Sejjt.  4,  1003):  727-731. 

Tlie   liscal    question:    history's    arounient.      C.    B.    Roylance 
Kent. 

J/ocmi/hnrs  magazine,  vol.  88  {Sept.,  1003):  336-3^3. 

L'Ang-leterre  et  Peconomie  politique.     X.  C.  Frederiksen. 
JLnide  economiquc,  13*^  annee  {Sept.  10.  1003):  353-354-. 

A  view  of  the  fiscal  controversv.     Sir  ]\1.  E.  Hicks-Beach. 
JfmtMi/  revieif\  vol.  12  {Sept.\  1003):  28-30. 

Die  ^^'irkung•   der   canadischen  Vorzugszolle.     Paul  Arndt. 
Nation  {Berlin),  20.  Jahrgang  {Sep.  5^,  1003):  776-778. 

1903.     The  economics  of  empire. 

Wational  review.,  vol.  4!2  {Sept.,  1003):   Spyecial  swpjylement, 
1-106. 

London's  case  against  protection.     Frederick  Dolman. 
New  liheral  revieto,  vol.  6  {Sept.,  1003):  174-185. 

The   great   fiscal   problem.     Avebury  [Sir   John    Lubbock]. 
Lionel  Phillips.     W.  H.  Mallock." 

Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  54  {Sept.,  1003):  353-300. 

Preferential  treatment  of  the  colonies. 

Statist,  vol.  52  {Sej)t.  5,  1003):  426. 

A  free  trading  imperial  ZoUverein.     Leonard  M.  Burrell. 

Westrninsfrr  review,  vol.  160  {Sept.,  1003):  237-245. 

» 

1903,     The  experts  and  Mr.  Chamberlain. 

World' sworl-  {London),  vol.  2  {Sept.,  1003):  342-347. 

Gives  the  text  of  the  "pronouncement  signed  by  no  fewer  tlian 
fourteen  professors  of  economics,  inchiding,  with  possibly  <ine 
exception,  all  the  leading  recognised  authorities  upon  political 
economy,  upon  .Air.  ("hamberlaiii's  proposals." 

The  food  tax:   how  it  would  atict-t  eggs  and  poultry.     Edward 
lirown. 

M^nrtd's  worl-  (London),  vol.  2  {Sept.,  1003):  357-358. 

The  fiscal  crisis. 

Blachrood's    Kdl)dnira/i    magazine,    rol.    174   {^^''l-^    1003): 
561-584. 


1903 
1903 

1903 
1903 


1903. 


1903 


24 


LIBKARY    OF    CONGRESS 


1903.     Mr.  Balfour  and  economic  fact.     J.  S.  Mann. 

Contemporary  review ,  vol.  H]^  ( Oct. ,  190S) :  Jt.69-Jf83. 

1903.     The  trade  of  the  empire.     Mark  Warren. 

Contemporary  revie^o.^  vol.  SJ^  {Oct.^  190J):  J^J^J^-Ifd?. 

1903.     Free  trade  and  protection.     Jehangir  C.  Coyaji. 
Fast  and  west,  vol.  2  {Oct.,  1903):   1111^-1119. 

1903.     The  confessions  of  an  eccentric  free  trader. 

East  and  west,  vol.  2  {Oct.,  1903):  11G9-1177. 

1903.  Some  advantagfes  of  preferential  tariffs,  I.  Increased  exports 
and  higher  wages.  Albert  Swindlehurst.  11.  Commercial 
prosperity  in  Ireland.  F.  St.  John  Morrow.  III.  Effect 
on  Canada.     Sir  Charles  Hibbert  Tapper. 

Empire  review,  vol.  6  {Oct.,  1903):  ^21^1-262. 

1903.     The  unionist  plunge  into  protection.     Autonomos. 

Fortnlgldly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  7Jf,  {Oct.  1,  1903):  555-561. 

1903.  The  fiscal  problem.  I.  The  present  state  of  the  case  for  Mr. 
Chamberlain's  policy.  W.  A.  S.  Hewins.  II.  Sir  Robert 
Peel  and  Mr.  Chamberlain:  1845-1903:  a  contrast.  Harold 
Spender.  III.  Will  a  preferential  tariff  oppress  the  poor? 
David  Christie  Murray  and  J.  W.  Atkinson. 
Fortn'ujhtly  revieiv,  v.  .?.,  vol.  71^  {Oct.  1,  1903):  590-626. 

1903.     Colonial  preference.     Edwin  Cannan. 

Indep)endcnt  revlefio,  vol.  1  {Oct.,  1903):  39-51. 

1903.     Protection  and  the  steel  trade.     Hugh  Bell. 

Independent  review,  vol.  1  {Oct.,  1903):  52-73. 

1903.     English  and  American  tariff'  experience. 

Institute  of  social  economics.     Lecture  hulletin,  vol.  7  {Oct.  15, 
1903):  h-32. 

1903.     L'imperialisme  economique  en  Angleterre.    Paul  Beauregard. 

2[oridr  econoti)ij/uc.  13"  an  nee  {Oct.  10,  1903):  JiJi.9-lf51. 

1903.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  fiscal  policy.     Sir  Edward  Grey. 

Montldy  rem&iv,  vol.  13  {Oct.]  1903):  11-25. 

1903.     Preference  and  retaliation.     Lord  Hugh  Cecil. 

Monthly  review,  vol.  13  {Oct.,  1903):  26-37. 

1903.     Canada,  the  empire,  and  Mr.  Chamberlain.     Goldwin  Smith. 

Monthly  review,  vol.  13  {Oct.,  1903):  38-54-. 

1903.     Chamberlain's  motiye.     jNI.  J.  Bonn. 

Mition  {Berlin), 21.  Ja/wgang  {Oct.  10,  17,  24,  1903):  22-21^; 
42-43;  52-55. 

1903.     Protection  and  the  stock  exchange.     Walter  W.  Wall. 

New  liberal  review,  vol.  6  {Oct.,  1903):  311-319. 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT:    ARTICLES    IN    PERIODICALS        25 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 


Free  trade  in  Eno-land.     Pxlwin  Maxev. 
JS'ew  liberal  revieic,  vol.  G  {Oct.,  1903):  320-32 Jf. 

The  tiscul  controversy — some   noticeable   facts  and  extracts. 
1.  Position  of  England  before  free  trade.     II.  Bismarck  on 
the  policy  of  reprisals.     O.  Eltzbacher. 
Nineteenth  century  and  after ^  vol.  oJ^.  {Oct..,  1903):  538-557. 

British  professors  and  fiscal  policies. 
Protectionist,  vol.  15  {Oct.,  1903):  1038. 

Mr.  Balfour's  firm  stand. 
Saturdaij  remeiv,  vol.  96  {Oct.  3,  1903):  j!^16-lf.l7. 

Mr.  Chamberlain's  figures. 
Saturday  revieio,  vol.  96  {Oct.  31,  1903):  537-538. 

The  position  of  the  government. 
Speaker,  n.  .*.,  vol.  9  {Oct.  3,  1903):  4. 

Prize  essay  on  protection.     A\'hat  is  trade?     James  Caliban. 
Speak^',  n.  s.,  vol.  9  {Oct.  17,  1903):  62-63. 

Lord  Rosebery  on  "  tied-liouse  "  imperialism. 
Spectatm^,  vol.  91  {Oct.  17,  1903):  592-593. 

Mr.  Chaml)erlain's  pledge. 
Spectator,  vol.  91  {Oct.  31,  1903):  688-689. 

The  tarili'  issue  in  England.     Edwin  Maxey. 
Arena,  vol.  30  {Nov..  1903):  J^3-I,88. 

Pinchbeck  protectionism.     Autonomos. 
Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  7Jf  {N>r.  2,  1903):  719-733. 

Mr.  Chamberlain:   the  protagonist  and  the  future.     Calchas. 
Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  7J^  {Nov.  2,  1903):  73k-71i.6. 

The  economic  prejudice  against  tariff  reform.     L.  L.  Price. 

Fortnightly  review,  u.  .v.,  vol.  7Ji.  {Nrv.  2,  1903):   71^7-760. 

The  commercial  future  of  England.     Leonard  Courtney. 
Gunton^x  magazine,  vol.  25  {Nov. ,  1903) :  396-JiOO. 

The  moral  issue. 
Tndejyendent  review,  vol.  1  {Nov.,  1903):  193-207. 

Labour  and  free  trade.     John  Burns. 
Independent  r<;rview,  vol.  1  {Noc.  1903):  208-222. 

Protection  and  the  cotton  industry.      Elijah  Helm. 
Independent  review ,  vol.  1  {Nov..^  190. >):  239-2 JfJJ. 

The  trade  protection  societies.     8.  W .  Beck. 
Magazine  of  commerce,  vol.  3  {Nor..  1903):  307-399. 

Mr.  I'alfour's  economic  notes.      Yves  (iu3^ot. 
Monthly  review,  vol .  13  {Nov.,  1903):    1-8. 


26  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS    ■ 

1903.     La  these  de  M.  Balfour.     Yves  Guj'ot. 

Monthly  revieiv,  vol.  13  (3y/r.,  1903):  D-IG. 

1903.     Sheffield  and  its  shadow.     Winston  S.  Churchill. 
21o/ithhj  revieic.^  vol.  13  {Nov.,  1903):  17-31. 

1903.     The  polic}^  of  imperial  preference.     Joseph  Chamberlain. 
JS  at  tonal  review.,  vol.  Jf.2  {]Voi\^  1903):  351-370. 
Living  age,  vol.  239  {Bee.  12.  1903):  61,1-635. 

1903.     The  electorate  and  the  tariti'   tempation.      J.   Ramsay  Mac- 
donald. 

Wev:  lihend  review,  vol.  0  (3^>r.,  7.9^5).'  J,36-I,JfS. 

1903.     ^Ir.  Chamberlain's  scheme.     Benjamin  Taylor. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  oJf.  {Nov.,  1903):  839-853. 

1903.     A  western  Canadian  yiew  of  the  iiscal  question.     K.  P.  Roblin. 

NortJi  A  nierican  revieio,  vol.  177  {Nov. ,  1903) :  667-677. 

1903.     Lo   nuove   controyersie   doganali   ing-lesi   e   i  loro  probabili 
efl'etti.     Luigi  Luzzatti. 

Nuova  antologia.  vol.  192  {Nov.  1,  1903):  12-23. 

1903.     ]Mr.  Chamberlain  and  his  critics. 

Pull ic  opinion,  vol.  8Jp  {Nov.  13,  1903):  607-610. 

1903.     Nouyel  aspect  de  I'eyolution  economique  de  FAngleterre.     P. 
Sincen}'. 

Refeytmie  econorn.ique,  W  annee  {Nov.  22,  1903):  lIi29-lJt32. 

1903.     The  yalue  of  a  preferential  tariff. 

Saturday  review,  vol.  96  {Nov.  IJ,..  19U3):  603-GOJf. 

1903     Preferential  tarifi's  or  as  vre  are. 

Saturday  review,  vol.  96  {N>v.  21,  1903):  632-633. 

1903.     Protection  and  character. 

Speaker,  n.  s.,  vol.  9  {N>v.  7.  1903):  127-128. 

1903.     The  fiscal  campaign. 

Speaker,  n.  s.,  vol.  9  {Nov.  IJf,  1903):   Supplemeni. 

Contains  extracts  from  speeches  by  John  Morley  and  Joseph  Cham- 
berlam,  with  a  diary  of  the  fiscal  campaign,  November  -1—10. 

1903.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  fiscal  fallacies. 

Spectator,  vol.  91  {Nov.  28,  1903):  911,-916. 

1903.     A  plea  for  absolute  free  trade.     Leonard  ]\L  Burrell. 
^Vefitminster  review,  vol.  160  {N>v.,  1903):  1^77-1^99. 

1903.     Commercialism  and  imperialism:  1.  External  trade.     II.  Arti- 
ficial regulation  of  trade.     John  George  Godard. 
Westminster  revieio,  vol.  160  {Nov.,  1903):   506-521;    {Dtc., 
1903):  621-639. 


BEITISH    TAKIFF    MOVEMENT:    ARTICLES    IX   PERIODICALS       27 


1S03.     Mr.  Chaniberlaiirs  scheme.     Lueien  Wolf. 

World  to-day,  vol.  [,  (:\yyr.,  190:':):  lUo-lJ^20. 

1903.     ]Mr.   Chamberlain's  case  and  the  answer. 

WorlcVs  work  (London),  vol.  2  {Xov.,  lon.i):  576-583. 

1903.  Canada  and  Mr.  Chamberlain:  a  symposium.  John  Charlton, 
Chancellor  Wallace,  Professor  Shortt.  Sii-  Thomas  Shaugh- 
nessy,  W.  C.  Nichol,  R.  P.  lioblin. 

Canadian  magazine,  vol.  22  [Dec,  1003):  130-137. 

1903.     Canada  and  the  new  imperialism.     E.  Farrer. 

Conti'mporary  reiyiew,  rol.  84  {D<'(\,  1003):  701-774. 

1903.     Preferential  tariffs  and  Canadian  interests.     A.  W.  Flnx, 
Eronomh-joarnaJ,  rol.  13  [Drc.,  1903):   4UO-Ii.S5. 

1903.  The  economic  possibilities  of  an  imperial  tiscal  polic3\  L.  L. 
Price. 

Econom ic  journal,  rol.  13  (Dec,  1003):  Ji/SG-504- 

1903.     India  and  preferential  taritls.     C.  A.  Elliott. 

Eiiijih'c  review,  rol.  0  {L><c.^  1003):  465-473. 

1903.  Imperial  fiscal  union:  trend  of  colonial  opinion.  C.  Kinloch 
Cooke. 

Empire  review,  vol.  6  {Dec,  1903):  474-4^6. 

1903.     Th(>  myth  of  the  big  and  little  loaf.     ^^^  H.  Mallock. 

Eorf nightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  74  [Dee.,  1903):  S93-009. 

1903.     Mr.  Balfour  and  retaliation.     (J.  Shaw  Lefevre. 

Eort nightly  rcriar.  n.  .s'.,  vol.  74  {Dee.,  1903):   941-955. 

1903.     The  free  trade  revolt  in  England.     J.  R.  Bisho]). 

International  (inartrrly.  vol.  8  {I )<<■.,  1903):  405-417. 

1903.     Th(>  daughters  of  the  house.      ^S .  P.  Reeves. 

Monthly  review,  vol.  13  {Dec.,  1903):  33-49. 

1903.  Authority  for  a  closer  union  with  the  colonies.  C.  A.  Whit- 
more. 

National  revieio,  vol.  42  {Dee.,  1903):  553-562. 

1903.     The  economics  of  empire.    IT.  l*reference  and  the  food  supply. 

National  review, vol .  42  { 1  ><<■..  If )0.'>):  S^jtrdal  .^upph  nont.  1-62. 

1903.     Mr.  ( 'hambcrliiin  wins. 

Uatlooh  {London),  vol.  12  {Dec.  19,  1903):  585-586. 

1903.     Dulwicli  and  Lewisham. 

raUicojnnion  (London),  vol.  S',  {/Kr.  AS',  i:iii.;):   773-775. 

1903.      Ircliuid  and  the  liscal  <|uestion. 

iSaturday  review,  vol.  90  {/he.  12, 1903):  724r-'725. 


28 


LTBKAEY    OF    CONGKESS 


1903.     More  fiscal  fullacics.     II.  Quelch. 

Social- Democrat,  vol.  7  {Dec.  15,  1903):  715-720. 

1903.     Protection  and  reform. 

SpeaJcer,  n.  s.,  vol.  0  {Dec.  19,  1903):  '289-'290. 

1903.     Points  from  speeches.     Sir  William  llarcourt.  Lord  Rosebery, 
Sir  Edward  Grey,  Herbert  H.  Asquith,  Edmund  Robertson. 
Sjyeal'e?',  )i.  .s-.,  vol.  9  {Dec.  19,  1903):   Supplement,  3. 

1903.     How  to  save  the  free-trade  unionist  seats. 

Spectator,  vol.  91  {Dec.  12,1903):  1012-1013;  {Dec.  19,1903): 
1075-1076. 

1903.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  speech  and  the  b}' -elections. 
Spectator,  vol.  91  {Dec.  19,  1903):  1068. 

1903.  Mr.  Chamberlain  and  Mr.  Balfour^ 

Spectator,  vol.  91  {Dec.  26,  1903):  1116-1117. 

1904.  The  main  features  of  the  present  foreign  trade  of  the  United 

Kingdom.     Solomon  Huebner. 
American  academy  of  political  and  socicd  science.    Aiinals,  vol. 
23  {Jan.,  1901^):  81,-101^. 

1904,     The  development  of  Mr.  Chamberlain's  fiscal  policy.     Thomas 

W.  Mitchell. 
~y  American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.    Annals,  vol. 

23  {Jan.,  190 IP,:  105-120. 

1904.     Chamberlain  at  Cardifl'. 

American  economist,  vol.  33  {Jan.  1,  190 J^:  8-10. 

1904.     A  letter  from  England:  the  issue  of  protection.     R.  Brimley 
Johnson. 
Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  93  {Jan.,  190 J^):  IJ^l-lU. 

1904.     The  fiscal  controversy:  discussion  at  the  Bankers'  institute. 

Banl'er''s  magazine  {London),  vol.  77  {Jan.^  190 J^):  1^9-56. 

1904.     Richard  Cobdcn. 

Blachioood'' t<  Edinlnirgli  magazine,  vol.  175 {Jan.,  190Ii):  IJfi- 
1^9. 

1904.     ]Mr.  Chamberlain's  campaign. 

Blachcood/s  Edinhnrgh  magazine,  vol.  175  {Jan.,  190Ii):  150- 
151^. 

1904.     Canada  and  the  Chamberlain  movement.     J.  W.  Longley. 

Canadian  magazine,  vol.  22  {Jan.,  190 If):  233-236. 

1904.     Professor  Ashley  and  the  tariff  problem.     J.  M.  McEvoy. 

Canadian  magazine,  vol.  22  {Jan.,  1901/):  237-21^.2. 

1904.     Is  free  trade  a  fallacy?     R.  E.  Macnaghten. 

Economic  review,  vol.  I4.  {Jan.  15,  190 If):  23-38. 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT:    ARTICLES    IN    PERIODICALS        29 

1904.     The  failure  of  free-traders  to   attain  their   ideal.     W.   Cun- 
ningham. 
Economic  review^  vol.  IJ4.  {Jan.  15^  lOO!/):  39-5S. 

1904.     Fiscal  alhisions.     Ernest  Foxwell. 

]imj)ire  revieic\  vol.  6  (Jan..,  1904):  577-587. 

1904.     Imperial  fiscal  union;  trend  of  colonial  opinion;  the  Ottawa 
conference  on  preference.     C.  Kinloch  Cooke. 
Empire  revieu\  vol.  6  {Jan. ,  1904) •'  5SS-600. 

1904.     The  known  and  the  unknown  in  Mr.  Chamberlain's  policy. 
A.  C.  Pigou. 

Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  75  {Jan.,  WOIf):  36-48. 

1904.     India  and  prefei'ential  tariiffs:  from  the  Indian  point  of  view. 
Sir  Roper  Lethbridge. 

Imperial  and  Asiatic  quarterly  review,  3d  sei\,  vol.  17  {Jan., 
1904):  1-16. 

1904.     Land  reform  versus  protection.     Charles  Trevelvan. 

Independent  review,  vol.  1  {Jan.,  1904):  51^2-554- 

1904.     Canada  and  the  Empire.     George  Peel. 

Tndepefndent  review,  vol.  1  {Jan.,  1904):  611-628. 

1904.     Protection  and  the  wool  trade.     J.  H.  Clapham. 

Independent  review,  vol.  1  {Jan.,  1904):  641-650. 

1904.     Decisions  of  chambers  of  commerce  on  the  question  of  fiscal 
reform. 
Magazine  of  cf/mmerce,  vol.  4-  {Jan.,  1904):  31-34. 

1904.     Foreign  trade  and  the  money  market.     Felix  Schuster. 

M<n}tldy  review,  vol.  I4  {Jan.,  1904^):  1-33. 

1904.     Fiscal  reform.     Charles  Booth. 

National  review,  vol.  42  {Jan.,  1904):  686-701. 

1904.     Cotton,  Cobden,  and  Chamberlain.     M.  W.  Kidle3\ 

National  review,  vol.  Jf2  {Jan.,  1904):  799-807. 

1904.     Ineffectual  preferences.     Sir  Robert  Gitten. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  55  {Jan.,  1904):  1-11. 

1904.     The  larger  basis  of  colonial  preference.     Benjamin  Kidd. 
Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  55  {Ja)i..  1904):  12-29. 

1904.     Why  I  shall  vote  for  Mr.  Cham}>erlain.     Alfred  AV.  Pollard. 

Pilot,  vol.  9  {Jan.  2,  1904):  7-8. 

1904.     The  tai'iir  timmlt. 

^alunhiy  n-view,  vol.  97  {Jan.  23,  1904):  100-101. 

1904.      Mr.  I'.ootli.  Mr.  Chamberlain,  and  Mr.  Peel. 
iSpeaker,  n.  .v.,  vol.  9  (.Ian.  2,  1904):  333-334. 


30  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

1904.     A  more  than  roA'ul  commission. 

Speeder,  n.  s.,  vol.  0  {Jan.  2,  lOOIj^):   Supplement.,  3-If.. 

1904.     The  vakic  of  the  New  Zealand  preference. 

Speake/'.  n.  .v.,  vol.  9  {Jan.  5,  190]^):   Si^jj^levitnt,  7-8. 

1904.     Mr.  Chamberlain  and  the  city. 

Spectator ,  vol.  92  {Jan.  2,  190If):  5-7. 

1904.     Free-trade  and  home-rule. 

Spectator,  vol.  92  {Jan.  9,  1901^):  J4.0-Jf2. 

1904.     Need  for  home  trade  statistics. 

St<it!st,  vol.  53  [Jan.  2,  1904);  15-16. 

1904.     Is  Mr.  Chamberlain  making  headway  i' 

Statist,  vol.  53  {Jan.  23,  1904):  146-147. 

1904.     The  fantastic  fallacy  of  an  empire  builder:  a  challenge  to  Mr, 
Chamberlain.     Leonard  M.  Burrell. 
Westminster  review^  vol.  161  {Jan.,  190 Jf):  7-20. 

1904.     The  fiscal  question  and  its  surroundings.     E.  B.  Husband. 

Westmhister  review,  vol.  161  {Jan.,  1904):  21-26. 

1904.     Chamberlain's  campaign.     E.  Morgan. 

American  economist,  vol.  33  {Feh.  5,  1904):  68-69. 

1904.     The  position  of  railwa}'  and  shipping  companies  under  "pro' 
tection.''     Charles  H.  Grinling. 
Banker's  magazine  {London),  vol.  77  {Feb.,  1904):  211-218. 

1904.     Free  trade,  New  South  Wales,  and  protected  Victoria.     C.  H, 
Chomley. 

Contemp>orary  review,  vol.  85  {Feh.^  lOOIf):  172-185. 

1904.     The  mystery  of  dumping.     J.  A.  Hobson. 

Contemporary  review,  vol.  85  {Feh.,  1904^):  186-197. 

1904.     Mr.  Charles  Booth's  j)roposals  for  fiscal  reform.      Bertrand 
Russell. 

Co7itemporary  review,  vol.  85  {Feb.,  1904):  198-206. 

1904.     The  protectionist  idea  of  foreign  trade.     W.  M.  Lightbody. 
Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  75  {Feb.,  1904):  308-313. 

1904.     England's  tariff  education. 

Gunton's  magazine,  vol.  26  {Feb.,  1904):  108-117. 

1904.     La  politique  de  M.  Chamberlain.     N.  C.  Frederiksen. 
Monde  Sconomique,  14^  annee  {Feb.  13,  1904):  193-195. 

1904.     A  national  tariff  for  national  defence. 

National  review,  vol.  Jpi  {Feb. ,  1904) '  884-895. 

1904.     Colonial  friends  and  foreign  rivals.     R.  'H.  Inglis  Palgrave. 

National  review,  vol.  42  {FJk.  1904):  979-1000. 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT:     ARTICLES    IN    PERIODICALS       31 


1904.     The  colonies  and  .Mr.  Chamberlain.     E.  T.  Cook. 

NewUheral  review,  vol.  7  {Fd>.,  190]^):  W-S2. 

1904.     Behind  the  tiscal  veil.     ]Monta»'uc  Crackanthorpe. 

Nineteenth  century  and  afiei\  vol.  56  {Fch.,   1904):  255-266. 

1904.     Free  trade  and  British  shippino-.     ^^'.  U,  Kenwick. 

Nineteenth,  century  and  after.,  vol.  55  {Ftilj.,  190 Jf):  323-S35. 

1904.     ^^'lly  1  shall  not  vote  for  ]Mr.  Chamberlain,     \\.  F.  Cholmeley. 
Pilot,  vol.  9  {Feh.  6,  1904.).-  137-138. 

1904.     Le  moLU  ement  protectionuiste  en  Angleterre.     H.  Rhein. 

Reforme  economiqne,  13"  annee  [FeJ).  28,  1904):    272-274-. 

1904.     The  rout  of  the  protectionists:  a  forecast  of  the  coming  gen- 
eral election. 
Revleaj  of  reviews  (London),  vol.  29  {Feh.,  1904):  134.-137. 

1904.     L'imperialisme  anglo-saxon.     N.  Colajanni. 

Revne  soclaliste,  vol.  39  {Feh.,  1901^):  205-230. 

1904.     Free  trade  and  interference  with  labour. 

Saturday  revleiv,  vol.  97  {Feh.  20,  1904):  226-227. 

1904.     Mr.  Balfour,  the  tiscal  problem  and  England's  fate.     Leonard 
M.  Biirrell. 

Westminster  revlev),  vol.  161  {Fdj. ,  190J^) :  161-177. 

1904.     British  tariti'  commission.     E.  Morgan. 

American  economist,  vol.  33  {Mar.  4,  1904):  116-117. 

1904.     The  tiscal  (question  and  the  money  market.     W.  K.  Lawson. 

Bankers  magazine  {London),  vol.  77  {Mar.,  1904):  364-380. 

1904.     ••  Have  you  no  opinion  of  your  own?"     .Vugustine  liirrell. 
Contemporary  re vleiv,  vol.  85  {Mar.,  1904):  323-328. 

1904.     The  argument  for  preference.     William  J.  Ashley. 
Economic  journal,  vol.  14-  {Mar.,  1904):  1-10. 

1904.     The  fiscal  (juestion  and  the  experience  of  the  Austro-Hungarian 
empire.     Leo  Pctritsch. 

Economic  journal,  vol.  14  {Mar.,  1901^:  24.-26. 

1904.     Pure  theory  and  the  tiscal  controversy.     A.  C.  Pigou. 
Economic  joarncd,  vol.  IJ4.  {Mar.,  1904):  29-33. 

1904.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  future. 

F(>r1nl(i]ttl y  review,  a.  ■•<.,  vol.  75  (Mar.   I.  I'.Xi'f):   44'~>~4'1^' 

1904.     The  tiscal  ((ucstion — a  bii'd's-eyo  view.     Charles  Follett. 

Fortnightly  rrr!r>r,  „.  .v..  >'«1 .  75{M,ir.  I,  1904):    '^60-470. 

l'"avoi:ilili'  t'l  .Mr.  ( 'li;iiiilKTl;iin"s  |iiilicy. 

1904.      Dumping.      Hugh  iiell. 

J loEjJciidcnt  review,  ml.  2(M<ir.,  19U4):  214.-231. 


32 


LIBRARY    OF    COKGRESS 


1904.     Le  vieux  neuf  protectionniste  en  Angleterre.     Yves  Guyot. 

Journal  des  economistes^  GS*^  annee  {Mar.  15^  190 If):  321-3JfO. 

1904.     The  favoured   foreig-ner:    a  comparison  in  burdens.     H.   J. 
Tennant. 

Monthly  remev^,  vol.  U  {2far.,  190 If):  37-51. 

' '  I  liave  endeavoured  to  deal  with  the  three  propositions  with  which 
we  set  out:  (1)  That  there  is  no  inconsistency -in  a  defence  of  free 
imports  and  a  belief  in  the  wi^^dom  and  necessity  of  our  industrial 
laws;  (2)  That  foreign  workmen  are  in  many  material  respects  as 
carefully  sheltered  from  industrial  abuses  as  British  workmen, 
and  in  certain  others  more  fully  secured;  and  (3)  That  protective 
laws  produce  a  higher  standard  of  workmen  and  an  increased 
efficiency  of  work,  from  which  we  may  rather  look  for  economic 
gain  than  increased  cost  of  production." 

1904.     Some  reflections  on  the  fiscal  question.     Duke  of  Bedford. 
Mifional  revieiv,  vol.  Jf3  {Mar.,  190Jt):  50-62. 

1904.     Australia  and  preferential  trade.     B.  R.  Wise. 

National  review.,  vol.  IfS  {Mar. ,  190 Jf) :  llfi-159. 

"The  economic  arguments  in  favour  of  Free  Trade  undoubtedly 
retain  their  force;  and  it  may  be  that  by  free  imports  we  shall 
accumulate  most  wealth  in  the  shortest  time.  But  neither  man 
nor  nation  'lives  by  bread  alone;'  and  the  case  has  now  arisen, 
which  Free  Trade  authorities  have  always  admitted  to  be  possi- 
ble, when  political  considerations  outweigh  the  economic." 

1904.     Ireland  and  the  fiscal  controversy.     John  Campbell. 
New  liberal  review^  vol.  7  {Mar. .  190Ii) :  168-180. 

1904.     The  unity  of  the  empire.     Lord  Thring. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  55  {Mar.,  190If):  353-367. 

"The  bargaining  incidental  to  any  prosecution  of  the  preferential 
tariff  system  nu;st  tend  to  separate  rather  than  bind  closer  a  vast 
group  of  almost  independent  communities,  differing  in  their 
products,  their  interests,  and  ambitions." 

1904.     India  and  the  tariff  reform.     Edward  Sassoon. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  55  {Mar.,  1901)):  JiJi.Jf-Ji,Jt8. 

1904.     Protection  in  Great  Britain.     Some  practical  difficulties  in  the 
situation. 
Protectionist,  vol.  15  {Mar.,  190 Ip):  1305-1310. 

1904.     The  triumph  of  the  Chamberlainites. 

Spectator,  vol.  92  {Mar.  12,  1904):  IfiO-Ifil. 

1904.     A  free-trade  ministry. 

Spectatm^  vol.  92  {Mar.  19,  1901^):  I^Ifi-Iflil. 

1904.     A  dishonest  policj".     Injuring  the  many  to  benefit  the  few. 
M.  D.  O'Brien. 

Westminster  review,  vol.  161  {Mar.,  1901^:  251i.-267. 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT:    ARTICLES    IX    PERIODICALS       33 


1904.     The  free  trade  debate.     Selections  from  the  arguments  and 
eloquence  of  both  political  parties  during  the  historic  tiscal 
debate  in  the  House  of  Commons. 
World".^  v:orl'  {Londrm),  vol.  J  (J/ar..  lOO-i):  3^7-350. 

1904.     The  lesson  of  the  free  trade  controvers}'.     R.  B.  Haldane. 

Wot'ld's  iro?'l  {London),  roj.  .')  {2Lir.,  190 Ji):  35 1-35 If.. 

1904.     Mr.  Longley  and  the  Chamberlain  movement.     Lewis  Hunt. 
Canadian  magazine^  vol.  22  {Aprils  100 Jf):  582. 

1904.     Retaliation.     H.  O.  Meredith. 

Independent  review.^  vol.  2  {Aj)/'/7^  lOOJf):  4.16-Ji29. 

Argues  that  the  "  most-fa voured-natioii "  arguments  afford  all  the 
protection  necessary  to  English  trade. 

1904.     The  free  trade  position.     Paul  E.  Roberts. 

JSfew  lihet'al  revieic,  vol.  7  (Ajjril,  1904)  ■'  350-359.  . 

1904.     The  rise  and  fall  of  free  trade.     C.  Arthur  Pearson. 
^[inisei/'s  magazine.,  vol.  31  {Api'iU  lOOIi):  ol-lfi. 

1904.     American  speculators  and  British  industries. 

Saturday  review,  vol.  97  {Apr.  2,  190 J^:  41S-U9. 

1904.     Fiscal  fallacies.     I.   Food  taxes  and  agricultural  prosperity. 

James  Dowman. 

WestTninster  review.,  vol.  161  {April.,  190Jf) :  375-385. 

"The  obtainable  and  authentic  facts  regarding  the  administration 
of  our  internal  system,  our  agricultural  economy,  should  convince 
every  reasonable,  if  intelligent,  individual  that  the  professions  of 
a  certain  class  of  politicians  in  ttie  present  advocacy  of  Protection 
are  entirely  worthless  and  unconvincing." 


APPENDIX 


LIST  OF  AYORIvS  ADDED   1904-1 900 


35 


SUPPLEMENTARY  LIST  OF  BOOKS  ON  THE 
BRITISH  TARIFF  MOVEMENT 

(Chamberlain's  Plan) 


Ashley,  Percy  "Walter  Llewellyn.     Modern  tariff  histor}":  Germany, 
United  States,  France.     With  a  preface  by  the  Rt.  Hon. 
R.  B.  Haldane. 
London :  J.  Murraxj.  1901^.     xxiii,  {2),  367,  {1)  pp.     8^. 

Short  bibliograph}'  with  each  part. 

"Based  chiefly  on  lectures  delivered  at  the  London  school  of  eco- 
nomics in  the  lent  and  summer  terras  of  1904." — Prcfator;/  vote. 
"Both  these  books  [Ashley's  Modern  tariff  history  "  and  Chap- 
man's "Work  and  wages"]  assert  that  they  are  written  with 
only  oblique  reference  to  the  tariff  controversy  in  Great  Britain. 
They  are  not  written  in  a  controversial  spirit  it  is  said;  and  this 
must  be  granted.  Yet  both  are  written  with  the  sub-assumption 
which  ajtpears  plainly  enough  that  their  subject-matter  points  to 
the  conclusion  in  the  one  case  that  the  tariff  history  of  foreign 
countries,  and  in  the  other  the  comparison  between  the  efficiency 
of  our  labour  and  capital  with  that  of  our  commercial  and  manu- 
facturing rivals,  furnishes  no  argument  for  any  alteration  on  our 
j^art  of  the  system  of  free  trade."  Saturday  revieiv,  Dec.  10,  1!'0.}, 
p.  734. 

Ashley,  William  James.     The  tariff  problem.     2d  ed.,  with  an  addi- 
tional chapter. 
London :   P.  S.  King  d;  son,  190k.     'vi,  (^),   ^^^  m^-     Tall  ex. 
2  fold,  dlagrs.     12'-^. 
Avebury,  John  Lubbock,  1st  haron.     Free  trade. 

J^ondon.,  Nisw  York:  MacmiUan  and  eo.,  limited,  190If..  .r, 
lGJ^.p2).  8°. 
Balfour,  Arthur  Jame.s.  Fiscal  reform;  speeches  delivered  from  June 
I8S0  to  December  1!>05,  together  with  a  reprint  of  the  pam- 
phlet 'P^conomic  iiote.s  on  insular  free  trade'  and  letters 
from  and  to  the  Right  lion.  J.  Chamberlain,  M.  P.  (Sep- 
tember 1903.)  With  a  preface. 
London,  New  York  and  Bomhay:  Longmans,  Green,  and  eo., 
1900.     xi,  280  pp.     8"^. 

Berard,  \'ict()r.       British    imperialism   and   commercial    supremacy. 
Tr.  by  H.  W.  Foskett. 
L(nid()n,  New  York  and  Bondxii/:   Limgmans,  Green,  and  co., 
HJUG.     (2),  X,  298,  (^)  pp.     8'. 

Contents. — Josej)!!  Chamljerlain. — Iniperialism. — Protection. — 
Free  trade. — Panbritannism. — German  rationalism. — E  n  g  1  i  s  h 
empiricism. 

37' 


1  1 ;;:  ri  6  .5 


38  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Blondel,  Georges.     La  politique  protectionniste  en  Angleterre;    un 
nouveau  danger  pour  la  France. 
Paris:    V.  Lecoffre,  1901^.     xv,  161,  ^2) pp.     i^°. 
"Notice  bibliographique":  pp.  [159J-161. 

Bowley,  Arthur  L[yon]  Statistical  studies  relating  to  national  prog- 
ress in  wealth  and  trade  since  1882:  a  plea  for  further 
enquiry. 

London:  P.  S.  King  <&  son,  190.!f.     xiii.,  S8 pp.     1^^. 

Brassey,  Thomas  Allnutt.    Problems  of  empire;  papers  and  addresses. 
London:  Ji.  L.  Liunrphreys,  1901^..     xiv^  255,  (1)  jp.     8^. 
Tariff  re^rm,  pp.  125-193. 

Burns,  John.     Labour  and  free  trade  <2nd  ed.> 

London:  L^enf  ^b  3£aftheio8,  ltd.,  printers,  [190.'^?]   19 p>p-    ^°- 
Cover-title. 

Chapman,  Sydne}^  J[ohn]     A  reply  to  the  report  of  the  Tariff  com- 
mission on  the  cotton  industry,  written  for  the  Free  trade 
league. 
Manchester  and  London:   Sherratt  <&  Hughes,  1905.     xix,  (6), 
1^.-169 2^V'     ^  diagrams.     8^. 

Contents. — Section  I.  The  growth  or  decline  in  the  export  of  cotton 
yarns  and  goods  and  its  significance. — Section  II.  Industrial 
growth. — Section  III.  Foreign  competition. — Section  IV.  Reme- 
dies. 

Work  and  wages,  in  continuation  of  Lord  Brassey's  '  Work 

and  wages'  and  '  Foreign  work  and  English  wages.'     Ft.  i. 
Foreign  competition,  by  Sydney  J.  Chapman  .  .   .  with  an 
introduction  by  Lord  Brasse}'. 
London,  NeiD  York,  and  Bombay:  Longmans,  Green,  andco., 
1901),.     XXXV,  301  pp.     8-. 

See  note  under  Ashley,  Percy.     Modern  tariff  history. 

Chomley,  C.  H.     Protection  in  Canada  and  Australasia. 

London:    P.  S.  King  &  son,  1901,..     xiii,  {3),  195 pp.     12"^. 
{Protection  in  various  countries.     Ed.  hy  W.  IT.  Datoson.) 

Contents.— Canada:  1.  Early  tariff  history;  2.  The  provincial 
tariffs;  3.  Tariffs  in  the  Dominion;  4.  Effectsof  the  national  policy; 
5.  Thetariff  reductions  of  1897;  6.  The  preferential  tariff ;  7.  The 
strength  of  protectionist  feeling;  8.  Imperial  preferential  trade. 
Australasia:  1.  The  origin  of  Victorian  i)rotection;  2.  The  tariffs 
of  New  South  Wales;  3.  Other  Australian  tariffs;  4.  Protection 
in  New  Zealand;  5.  Factors  in  Victorian  protection;  6.  Compari- 
son between  Victoria  and  New  South  Wales;  7.  ]Manufactures 
under  protection  and  free  trade;  S.  Protection  and  industrial  wel- 
fare; 9.  Protection  and  the  primary  industries;  10.  Protection  in 
the  Commonwealth. 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMEXT:    APPENDIX  39 

Compatriots'    (.hit).    London.     Compatriots'    chit)     lectures.     First 
series.     Ed.  b}'^  the  committee  of  the  Compatriots'  club. 
London^  X<^u)  Yorh:  Macmlllan  and  co.^  limited^  1905.     vl, 
{£),  327 pp.     8-. 

"The  Compatriots'  club,  a  non-partisan  body,  was  constituted  in 
March  1904  with  the  object  of  advancing  tlie  ideal  of  a  united 
British  empire." 

"The  present  volume  consists  of  papers  read  and  discussed  at  the 
club  meetings  as  well  as  of  lectures." 

Contexts. — Garvin,  J.  L.  The  principles  of  constructive  economics 
as  applied  to  the  maintenance  of  empire. — Wilson,  H.  W.  Tariff 
reform  and  national  defence. — Caillard,  Sir  V.  Imperial  prefer- 
ence and  tlie  cost  of  food. — Cockburn,  Sir  J.  A.  The  evolution 
of  empire. — Gwynne,  H.  A.  The  proper  distribution  of  the 
population  of  the  empire. — Ashley,  W.  J.  Political  economy  and 
the  tariff  problem. — Hills,  J.  W.  Colonial  preference  in  the 
past. — Cunningham,  W.     Tariff  reform  and  jiolitical  morality. 

Cox,  Harold,    td.     British  industries   under   free    trade:  essays   by 
experts. 
London:   T.  F.   Unwin,  1903.     xix,  376 j)]:).     S°. 

Contents. — The  cotton  industry,  by  E.  Helm. — The  woollen  indni-- 
try,  by  Sir  S.  Smith. — The  linen  industry,  by  Sir  K.  L.  Patter- 
son.— The  silk  trade,  by  M.  Blair. — The  development  of  British 
banking,  by  a  practical  banker. — Shipping  liners,  by  M.  L. 
Davies. — Tramp  shipping,  by  W.  Runciman,  jun. — The  cutlery 
trade  of  Sheffield,  by  F.  Callis.— The  tinplate  trade,  by  W.  L. 
Williams. — Confectionery  and  preserve-making  industries,  by 
R.  J.  Boyd. — Tlie  grocer's  industr}',  b}'  J.  1.  Rogens. — The  pai)er 
trade,  by  A.  Spicer. — The  alkali  industry,  by  A.  Mond. — The 
soap  industry,  by  A.  H.  Scott. — The  boot  and  shoe  trade,  by  J.  T. 
Day. — Flour  milling  under  free  trade,  by  A.  Law. — The  iron  and 
steel  trade,  by  II.  Bell. — The  machinery  and  engineering  trades, 
by  A.  Wadham. — The  coal  trade,  by  I).  A.  Thomas. 

Creswicke,  Louis.     The  life  of  the  Kiuht  Honourable  Joseph  Cham- 
berlain. 
London:    The   Caxton   jmh/isjinxj   conipani/.,  [1904--190o].     4- 
vols.     Frontispiece.     Ill  iixfnitidux.    Plates.    Portraits.    8"^. 

Cunningham,  William.     The  rise  and  decline  of  the  free  trade  move- 
ment. 
London.,  (J.  J.  Clay  c6  sons.,  190.!(..     x,  168  pj).     i^°. 

Contents. — Introduction. — Pitt  and  the  revolted  colonies. — HuS' 
kisson    and     tariff    reform.  —  I'cel    and    restrictive   regulations. — 

Colidcii  and  1 miercial  treaties. — Is  one-sided  free  trade  exjiedi- 

ent  for  JOngland? — Expert  oiiinion.  —  An  imperial  system. 

Farrer,  [Thomas  Henry  Farrer],  hi  Imron.  Free  trade  versus  fair 
trade.  liy  the  late  Lord  Fan-cr  .  .  .  New  ed.  with  notes 
and   latest  statistics  by   C    II.    ('h()nd(\v. 

\Lon(h>ii\:    71ir  Frrr  fr<td    iniJn,,.   niUlf..      ,r.,'^  J^Or,  j>p.      13°. 


40  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Flux,  Alfred  "William.     Econoi2)ic  principles,  an  introductory  study. 

London:  Mettiuendi CO. ^190 If..     xx.,3'21i,])J>-     Diagrams.     8^. 

Fuchs,  Karl   Johannes.      Die   Handelspolitik    Eng-lands  und   seiner 
Kolonien  in  den  letzten  Jahrzehnten. 
Leipzig:    Yerlag  von  Duncker  cfe  ILuinhlot.,  1893.     ,r,  358  jyp. 
8°.     (Schriffen  des  Yereins  fiir  Socialj)olitiA',  57.) 

The  trade  polic}^  of  Great  Britain  and  her  colonies  since  1860. 

Tr.  by  Constance  H.  M.  Archibald,  with  a  preface  by  the 
Right  Hon.  J.  Parker  Smith. 
London.,    N'eiv    York:    Macnxillan    and   co..^    limited^    1905. 
xxxviii.,  If.13  pp.     8°. 

[G-arvin,  J.  L.]     The  economics  of  empire. 

[London:  Edward  Arnold,  1903-1904]  106,  62  2^2>-  8°. 
{SjMcial  supplements  to  The  National  review,  vol.  Ji'2^  Nov.., 
1903,  Feb.,  190 4.) 

"Most  of  Mr.  Garvin's  work,  however,  has  been  anonymous, 
induding  'The  Economics  of  Empire,'  that  much  discussed  Sup- 
plement to  TJte  National  Review.'^     Ath.,  Jan.  J4,  1905:  51. 

Imperial  reciprocity  :    a  study  of   fiscal   policy  in   a  series 

of  articles  revised  and  reprinted  from  The  Daily  Telegraph. 

London:  Office  of  the  Daily  Telegraph,  [1903].  xx,  113 
pp.     JiP. 

"  Mr.  J.  L.  Garvin  has  somewhat  suddenly  undertaken  the  editor- 
ship of  the  extended  Outlook.  His  articles  on  foreign  politics  have 
been  largely  quoted  in  Paris  and  Berlin;  he  is  tlie  acknowledged 
author  of  the  The  Daily  Telegraph  papers  on  'liscal  Reform,' 
repul)lished  with  an  approving  preface  from  Mr.  Chamberlain." 
Ath.  Jan.  I4,  1905. 

Contents:  Statistical  analysis  of  British  trade;  Preference  resolu- 
tion at  Coronation  conference;  Mr.  Chamberlain's  speech;  i. 
Mr.  Chamberlain's  warning:  The  issue  of  an  epoch;  Colonial  con- 
ferences and  preferential  trade;  The  colonies  as  customers;  The 
retaliation  issue:  11.  The  German  challenge;  in.  The  Canadian 
test  case;  iv.  Would  America  retaliate?  a  precedent  for  prefer- 
ence; v.  Free  choice  and  free  trade;  Foreign  interests  divided; 
The  inquiry:  vi.  Coal  and  commerce.  The  truth  about  trade;  vn. 
The  foreign  invasion;  viii.  Free  trade  or  better  trade?  i.x.  The 
colonies  and  commercial  supremacy.  Canada  and  the  preference 
clause;  x.  Our  exports  of  people:  a  study  of  emigration  and, em- 
pire; XI.  The  false  theory  of  imports;    xii.    The  true  theory  of 

.  imports;  xiii.  The  home  market.  Food  and  the  transfer  of  tax- 
ation: XIV.  What  will  it  cost  you?  xv.  Will  preference  lower 
prices?  xvi.  To  the  workmen  of  Britain.  Cobdenism  and  trade 
unionism;  xvii.  'The  island  that  dreamed';  xviii.  Why  should 
we  change? 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT:    APPENDIX  41 

Gififen,  S/r  Robert.     Economic  inquiries  and  studies. 

London:    G.  Bell  and  son^^  1901^.     2  vols.     8°. 

Contexts. — I.  i.  The  cost  of  the  Franco-German  war  of  1870-71. 
II.  The  depreciation  of  gold  since  1848.  iii.  The  Uquidations  of 
1873-76.  IV.  On  the  fall  of  prices  of  commodities  in  1873-79. 
V.  Recent  changes  in  prices  and  incomes  compared,  vi.  Mr. 
Gladstone's  work  in  finance,  vii.  Taxes  on  land.  viii.  The  tax- 
ation and  representation  of  Ireland,  ix.  The  nse  of  import  and 
export  statistics,  x.  The  progress  of  the  working  classes  in  the 
last  half  century,  xi.  Foreign  competition,  xii.  The  economic 
value  of  Ireland  to  Great  Britain. — II.  xiii.  The  utility  of  com- 
mon statistics,  xiv.  On  international  statistical  comparisons. 
XV.  The  gross  and  the  net  gain  of  rising  wages,  xvi.  The  recent 
rate  of  material  progress  in  England,  xvii.  Protection  for  manu- 
factures in  new  countries,  xviii.  Note  on  the  Gresham  law. 
XIX,  Fancy  monetary  standards,  xx.  Protectionist  victories  and 
free  trade  successes.  .\:xi.  Consols  in  a  great  war.  xxii.  Some 
economic  aspects  of  the  South  African  war.  xxiii.  The  relative 
growth  of  the  component  parts  of  the  empire,  xxiv.  The  stand- 
ard of  strength  for  our  army:  a  business  estimate,  xxv.  The  sta- 
tistical century.  XXVI.  Are  we  living  on  capital?  xxvii.  A  finan- 
cial retrospect — 1861-1901.  xxviii.  The  importance  of  general 
statistical  ideas,  xix.  The  wealth  of  the  empire,  and  how  it 
should  be  used.  xxx.  The  dream  of  a  British  ZoUverein.  xxxi. 
The  present  economic  conditions  and  outlook  for  the  United 
Kingdom. 

Great  Britain.  Board  of  trade.  British  and  foreign  trade  and 
industry.  Memoranda,  statistical  tables  and  charts,  with 
reference  to  vai'ious  matters  bearing  on  British  and  foreign 
trade  and  industrial  conditions.  Presented  to  both  Houses 
of  Parliament  by  command  of  His  Majesty. 
London :  Kyre  and  Spottinooode,  190S-190Jf,.  2  vols.  Folded 
sheets.  F.  {Great  Britain.  Parliament  Sessional 
pajjer.s  1903,  Cd.  1761;  WOh,  Cd.  2337.) 

Contexts. — Memoranda,  tables,  and  charts:  i.  Imports  and  exports 
of  manufactured  goods  into  and  from  the  United  Kingdom, 
France,  ( iermany,  and  the  United  States;  with  notes  of  tariff  and 
other  important  changes  and  events;  ii.  Export  trade  of  the 
United  Kingdom  to  protected  and  unprotected  foreign  countries 
and  colonies;  in.  Statements  showing  in  detail  the  manufactured 
and  partly  manufactured  articles  exjiorted  from  and  imported 
into  the  United  Kingdom  for  the  years  1890-1902;  iv.  Exports  of 
coal  and  machinery,  and  of  all  other  articles  of  British  produce; 
V.  Memorandum  on  the  excess  of  imports  into  the  Uniteil  King- 
dom; VI.  Tal)l('s  relating  to  the  supply  of  fooilstuffs  and  raw 
materials  into  the  United  Kingdom;  vii.  Detailed  statement 
showing  tlie  value  of  the  imports  of  various  descriptions  of  food- 
stuffs into  tlie  United  Kingdom  from  each  of  the  principal  for- 
eign countries  and  colonies  in  1902;  viii.  Wheat  prices  in  the 
United  Kingdom,  France,  (iermany,  and  the  United  States  from 
1840-1902;  and  the  variations  in  import  duties  on  wheat  during 


42  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Great  Britain.     Board  of  trade — Continued. 

the  same  period;  ix.  Changes  in  the  German  and  French  tariff 
rates  on  the  principal  foodstuffs;  ix  (a).   Wheat  prices  and  freight 
rates;  x.  Statistics  of  the  tinplate  trade,  with  special  reference  to 
British  exports  to  the  United  States  and  other  destinations,  and 
the  effect  of  the  United  States   tariff  thereon;  xi.  Note  on  the 
practice  of  foreign   countries  and  their  colonies  with  regard  to 
preferential  trade;  xii.  Memorandum  and  tahles  relating  to  the 
trade  of  the  colonial  possessions  of  France,  with  comparative  fig- 
ures for  those  of  certain  other  countries;  xiii.   Notes  on  the  for- 
mer preferential  duties  in  the  United  Kingdom  on  imjjorts  of 
certain  articles  from  British  colonies  and  possessions;  xiv.  Note 
on    the    tariff  treatment  of  products  of  the   United   Kingdom 
and   of    British    colonies   by   foreign    countries;    xv.     Note    on 
draw'backs  and  other  methods  of  remitting  duties  on  imported 
raw   materials    and    unfinished    articles    used    in    manufacture 
for  export;   xvi.    Memorandum    (with   tabular  statements)    on 
the  comparative  incidence  of  foreign  and  colonial  import  tariffs  on 
the  export  trade  of  the  United  Kingdom;  xvii.  Participation  of 
foreign  vessels  in  the  shipping  trade  within  the  British  Empire 
with  notes  on  the  practice  of  other  countries  in  respect  of  their 
colonial  and  coasting  trades;  xviii.  The  consumption  of  food  and 
cost  of  living  of  the  working  classes  in  the  United  Kingdom  and 
certain  foreign  countries;  xix.  The  general  course  of  money  wages 
in  the  United  Kingdom  in  a  series  of  years;  xx.  The  course  of 
money  wages  in  certain  foreign  countries  in  a  series  of  years; 
XXI.  Memorandum  (with  statistical  appendix)  on  the  compara- 
tive level  of  money  wages  in  the  United  Kingdom,  the  United 
States,   Germany,   and  France  at  the  present  time;   xxii.  The 
export  policy  of  trusts  in  certain  foreign  countries:  The  German 
Empire;  The  United  States,  Austria-Hungary;  xxnr.  Note  on  the 
proportion  of  the  total  wages  expenditure  in  the  United  Kingdom 
which  is  incurred  on  account  of  our  export  trade;  xxiv.  Tables 
showing  the  number  of  persons  in  England  and  Wales  occupied 
in  certain  important  groups  of  industries  (1851-1901);  xxv.  Out- 
put of  textiles  and  iron  in  the  United  Kingdom;  xxvi.  Statistics 
relating  to  the  present  condition  of  the  iron  and  steel  trade  on 
the  northeast  coast;  xxvii.  Statistics  bearing  on  the  industrial 
condition  of  the  United  Kingdom  and  of  certain  important  com- 
mercial countries;    xxviii.  Statement  showing  the  comparative 
progress  of  British  and  foreign  shipping  (1840-1902);  xxix.  State- 
ment showing  the  comparative  progress  of  shipbuilding  in  the 
United  Kingdom,  France,  Germany,  and  the  United  States  (1858- 
1902);   XXX.    Imports    from    foreign    countries    into    the    self- 
governing  colonies;  xxxi.  Miscellaneous  tables  respecting  British 
trade  and  production  during  the  years  1854  to  1902;  Appendix. 
Uist  of  the  principal  official  publications  of  the  Board  of  Trade 
and  other  governmental  departments  bearing  on  trade,  labour, 
and  fiscal  questions. 
Vol.  2.  Memoranda,  tables  and  charts:  i.  Consumption  and  cost  of 
food  in  workmen's  families  in  urban  districts  in  the  United  King- 
dom; II.  Changes  in  the  cost  of  living  of  the  working  classes  in 
large  towns;  in.  Fluctuations  in  employment  in  the  United  King- 
dom   and   certain  foreign  countries;   iv.    Course  of   pauperism 
in    certain  foreign  countries;     v.   Emigration    from    the    chief 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT!    APPENDIX  43 

European  countries;  vi.  Savings  bank  deposits  in  the  principal 
countries;  vii.  Course  of  wholesale  prices  of  cereals  and  liour  in 
the  United  Kin>rdoni  and  certain  foreign  countries;  viii.  The 
course  of  ocean  freights  during  the  past  20  yearn;  ix.  Changes  in 
customs  duties  in  the  principal  importing  countries  on  grain,  tlour 
and  meat;  x.  Comparative  incidence  of  foreign  and  colonial  im- 
port tariffs  on  the  principal  classes  of  manufactures  exported  from 
the  United  Kingdom;  xi.  The  tariff  treatment  of  prodm-ts  of  the 
United  Kingdom  and  of  British  colonies  by  foreign  countries; 
XII.  Imports  and  exports  of  manufactured  and  partly  manufac- 
tured goods  into  and  from  the  United  Kingdom;  xni.  Countries  of 
consignment  of  the  imj)orts  into  the  Unitt'd  Kingdom  during  the 
first  six  months  of  1904;  xiv.  Course  of  the  export  trade  of  the 
chief  commercial  countries  with  protected  and  other  markets; 
XV.  Methods  of  remitting  or  refunding  duties  on  imported  mate- 
rials used  in  manufacture  for  export;  xvi.  Abstract  of  the  Pro- 
ceedings of  the  German  Commission  on  Kartells;  xvii.  DistriV)u- 
tion  of  pojiulation  engaged  in  the  principal  industries  throughout 
the  chief  countries  of  the  world;  Appendices:  i.  Supplementary 
figures  and  other  particulars  bringing  up  to  date  the  information 
contained  in  certain  sections  of  the  original  volume  of  ilefnoranda, 
etc.;    II.  Corrections  to  be  made  in  the  above-mentioned  volume. 

Grreat  Britain.  Board  of  trade.  Index  to  the  two  vohinies  of  Memo- 
niiida,  statistical  tables,  and  charts,  ,  .  .  [Cd.  1761  of 
i!t03  and  Cd.  2337  of  IDOl.]  Presented  to  l)oth  Houses  of 
Parliament  by  command  of  His  Majesty. 
London:  Darling djson.^  1905.  53 pp.  F.  {^Gr eat  Britain. 
Parliament.     Sessional  j^apers,  1905.      Cd.  2669.) 

Colonial    import  duties,    19U5.     lieturn  relating-  to 

the  rates  of  import  duties  levied  upon  the  principal  and 
other  jirticles  imported  into  the  Britisli  colonies,  posses- 
sions, and  protectorates.  (Duties  in  force,  so  far  as  noti- 
fied to  the  Board  of  trade,  at  date  of  preparation  of  this 
return,  October  l!)05.)  Presented  to  l)oth  Houses  of  Par- 
liament by  connnaiid  of  His  Majesty. 
London:  Eyre  a)id  Spottiswoode,  1905.  xxv.,{l),5W  pp.  8^. 
{Great  Britain.  Parliament.  Sessional  papers.,  1905.^  Cd. 
2627.) 

Harney,    Kdward  A.   St.   Aubyn.     Imperialism   from  an   Australian 

standpoint. 

{In  Royal  colonial  institute.  Proceedings,  vol.  36,  pp.  88-116. 
hiscussion,  jqi.  IKl-lL'i).     London,  1905.     8°.) 

Hoare,  Benjamin.     Preferential  trade;  a  stud}'  of  its  esoteric  meanino-. 

London:    K.  /'////,    TrcncJi.,  Truhiker  t6  co.,  ltd..,  1901^..     xlii^ 

295  pp.     6'-. 

Co.N'TENTs. — Hook  I.  The  want  of  a  true  science:  Letter  i.  ToOpeius, 
The  root  oi  the  tariff  cnntrovcrsy;  Letter  ii.  To  tiie  right  hon. 
Leonard  ("uurtm-y,  C/learing  tlie  ground;  Letter  iii.  To  Sir  llig- 


44  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

glcr  of  the  market,  Cheapness — a  new  juggernaut;  Letter  iv.  To 
the  war  spirit  of  competition,  Trade  competition — tlie  great 
demoraliser;  Letter  v.  To  the  fraternal  spirit  in  man,  Co-opera- 
tion— the  solvent  of  competition;  Letter  vi.  To  Lord  Rosebery, 
Trade — its  tendency  and  nature.  Book  ii.  Trade  viewed  in  the 
light  of  history:  Letter  vii.  To  Mr.  John  Bull,  Building  the 
world's  workshop;  Letter  viii.  To  Michael  Davitt,  Esq.,  Free 
trade  the  destroyer  of  Ireland;  J^etter  ix.  To  Lord  Curzon,  The 
Hindoo  and  the  trader;  Letter  x.  To  President  Emile  Loubet, 
AVhy  France  abjured  free  trade;  Letter  xi.  To  President  Theodore 
Eoosevelt,  How  America  found  her  fiscal  faith;  Letter  xii.  To 
the  unspeakable  Turk,  How  the  foreign  trader  blighted  Turkey; 
Letter  xiii.  To  the  privy  councillcr  M.  De  Witte,  ex-minister  of 
Russian  finance,  The  rise  of  the  Muscovite  manufacturer;  Letter 
XIV.  To  Kai.ser  Wilhelm,  German  ethics  in  political  economy; 
Letter  xv.  To  the  minister  of  the  interior  of  the  Netherlands, 
The  Hanseatic  league  and  the  Netherlands;  Letter  xvi.  To  David 
Syme,  Esq.,  pioneer  of  Australian  protection.  Why  Australia 
shed  Cobdenism;  Letter  xvii.  To  the  Right  Hon.  Joseph  Cham- 
berlain, The  world-wide  experiences  of  free  trade.  Book  iii. 
Reaching  a  conclusion:  Letter  xviii.  To  Sir  A.  Conan  Doyle,  The 
science  of  protection;  Letter  xix.  To  the  Right  Hon.  Arthur 
Balfour,  Prime  Minister  of  England,  The  Philosophy  of  protec- 
tion; Letter  xx.  To  Mr.  John  Burns,  M.  P.,  The  cost  of  protec- 
tion; Letter  xxi.  To  the  genius  of  the  Cobden  Club,  The  cost 
of  free  trade;  Letter  xxii.  To  Sir  Frederick  Holder,  Speaker  of 
the  Australian  Parliament,  The  free  trade  case  summarised; 
Letter  xxiii.  To  W.  D.  Beazley,  Esq.,  Speaker  of  the  Victorian 
parliament,  The  protectionist  case  summarised;  Letter  xxiv. 
To  the  Hon.  Alfred  Deakin,  Prime  Minister  of  the  Australian 
commonwealth,  Reaching  the  goal;  Index. 

Hobson,  John  Atkinson.     International  trade;  an  application  of  eco- 
nomic tlieor}'. 
London:  Methxien  &  co.,  190 Jf.     xii,  202,  (2)  jyp.     12-. 

Republished  in  part  from  the  Contemporary  review  and  the  West- 
minster gazette,     cf.  Pref. 

The  Hungry  forties:  life  under  the  bread  tax. 
London:    TJnwin,  IBOlf..     27Ji.]yp.     12^. 

"This,  book,  which  is  avowedly  published  in  the  interest  of  Free 
Trade,  consists  mainly  of  contributions  from  aged  survivors  of 
Protectionist  times.  It  is  the  outcome  of  a  letter  which  Mr. 
Unwin  sent  to  the  press  last  February,  suggesting  that  such  sur- 
vivors should  send  him  their  recollections."  Outlook  {London), 
Nov,  12,  '04:  460. 

The  Imperial  tariff  for  1903.  Containing  the  laws  and  regulations 
governing  the  importation  and  warehousing,. as  well  as  the 
exportation  or  transshipment  of  all  kinds  of  merchandise. 
By  T.  E.  O'Reilly. 
London:  Eyre  and  Sjwttisvioode,  [1903].  I,  783,  31Ii,  pp. 
16°. 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT:    APPENDIX  45 

Jeans,  James  Stephen.  Cantida's  resources  and  possibilities.  AYith 
special  reference  to  the  iron  :ind  allied  industries,  and  the 
increase  of  trade  Avith  the  mother  country. 
London:  Offi^ces  of  tlie  British  iron  trade  association^  190^. 
XV,  298  pp.  Frontispiece.  Illustrations.  JUajjs  {partly 
folded).     8^. 

Jebb,  Richard.     Studies  in  colonial  nationalism. 

London :  1l.  Arnold.,  1905.     xi\  336  jrp.     8°. 

The  colonial  conference. — Nationalism  in  tariffs:  Fiscal  policy  be- 
yond the  seas,  pp.  214-240;  Little  England  and  tariff  reform, 
pp.  241-271;  Imperial  partnership:  The  partner-states,  pp.  272- 
304. 

Kirkup,  Thomas.     Progress  and  the  tiscal  problem. 

London:  A.  and  C.  Black,  1905.     vi,  198 pp.     12°. 

Contents. — Introduction. — Industrial  development  of  (rreat  Brit- 
ain.— Industrial  position  of  ( Jennany.  —Industrial  jiosition  of 
America. — Success  in  industrial  competition. — Freedom  and  prog- 
ress.— Free  trade  in  the  light  of  history. — A  change  of  outlook. — 
Dumping. — Sifted  statistics. — Tariff  reform  and  industrial  prog- 
ress.— The  state  and  progress. 

"This  is  something  more  than  a  mere  discussion  of  the  technical 
question  of  economics.  It  is  a  consideration  of  the  wider  aspects 
of  progress,  which  seem  to  the  author  vitally  connected  with  the 
fiscal  problem." 

La-wson,  W.  R.     British  economics  in  1904. 

William  Blachcood  and  sons,  Edinburgh  and  London,  190^. 
vi,  .IfOl  pp.     12- . 

Macara,  Charles  Wright.  How  Mr.  Chamberlain's  proposed  fiscal 
changes  would  affect  the  cotton  trade;  some  conuniuiica- 
tions  to  the  press.  The  report  of  the  joint  cotton  confer- 
ence held  in  Manchester  on  July  21,  1903,  and  a  reply  to 
the  prime  minister. 
[Majichester:  Marsden  and  co.,  ltd.,  1903. \     11  i>p-     8^. 

Mackenzie,  V.  St.  Clair.     The  dynamics  of  the  fiscal  problem. 

London:  E.    Wilson,  190^.     xvi,  312 pp.     12^. 

Contents. — History. — Social  and  industrial  forces. — Imports  and 
exports. — "  Dumping." — The  principles  of  protection. — Trusts. — 
Our  food  supplies. — The  position  i>f  the  consumer. — Labour. — 

Imperialism. — Conclusion. 

Montagu,  Edwin  S.  a/id  Broii  Herbert.     Canada  and  the  Kmpire:  an 
examination  of  tradi;  piei'erences.      With  a  preface  by  Rt. 
Hon.  the  Eail  of  Rosebery,  k.  g. 
London:  P.  S.  King <& son.)  190Ji..    xmii.,  198 py.    Diagr.    12°. 

Appendi.x  i  (p.  [181]-1.54)  consist.s  of  mi.'^cellaneous  extracts  from 
various  Canadian   laiiiliiatioii.'j.     Appendix   ii   (p.    [155]-198)  of 


46  LIBKARV    OF    CONGRESS 

opinions  expressed  by  representative  Canadians  in  answer  to  a 
series  of  questions  submitted  to  them  by  the  authors. 
Contents. — I.  Canadian  conditions. — II.  Canada  and  the  United 
States. — III.  Canadian  view  of  English  politics.— IV.  The  results 
of  the  policy. — V.  What  Britain  might  do. — VI.  Conclusion. 

Nicholson,  Joseph  Shield.     The  taritf  question,  with  special  reference 
to  wages  and  emplo3"ment, 

London:  A.  and  C.  Black,  1003.     66  pp.     12°. 

Petritsch,  Leo.     Die  Zollfrage  in  England. 

{In  Zeitschrift  fiir  Volkswirtschaft,  Socialpolitik  und  Verwaltung, 
vol.  14,  pp.  272-298.     Wien  und  Leipzig,  1905.     4°.) 

Protection  and  industry,  by  Sir  Swire  Smith,  Walter  Runciman  [and 
others]. 
London,  Methuen  db  co.,  lOOIj..     viii,  {£),  157,  (1)  pj).     M^. 

"A  collection  of  articles  contributed  by  various  writers  to  the  Man- 
chester guardian. " — Pref.  note. 

Contents. — The  woollen  and  worsted  trades,  by  Sir  S.  Smith. — The 
iron  and  steel  trades,  by  H.  Bell. — Machinery  and  engineering, 
by  A.  Wadham. — The  cotton  trade,  by  E.  Helm. — The  coal  trade, 
by  Sir  C.  McLaren. — Shipping,  by  W.Runciman. — The  hardware 
and  allied  trades,  by  S.  G.  Hobson. — Agriculture,  by  J.  Long. — 
The  pottery^trade,  by  W.  Burton. — The  chemical  industries,  by 
A.  Mond.— The  money  and  stock  markets,  by  "A  city  editor." 

Report  of  Mr.  Chamberlain's  tarili'  commission. 

{In  Iron  and  coal  trades  review,  vol.  69,  July  22,  1904,  pp.  260-261.) 
Reviews  the  report. 

Schooling,  John  Holt.     The  British  trade  year-book,  1905. 
London:  John  Mtirray.^  1905.     xxviii.,  335  pp.     J/P. 

Smart,  William.     The  return  to  protection. 

London.,  JSfew    York:  Macmillan  and  co.,  limited,  190 Jf.    x., 

Smith,  Charles  William,  of  Liverpool.  Free  trade  and  protection 
under  the  international  bear  operator;  copy  of  a  letter,  etc., 
to  the  Rt.  Hon.  Joseph  Chamberlain,  m.  p.,  on  the  question 
of  "Cobden's"  real  free  trade — 1846-1874,  in  comparison 
with  the  international  "capitalistic-gambling"  basis  of  the 
world's  trade  and  finance — 1874-1904. 
London:  P.  S.  King  cb  son,  190 If.     xi,256pp.     12^. 

Sno-wden,  Philip.     The  Chamberlain  bubble.     Facts  about  the  Zoll- 
verein,  with  an  alternative  policy. 
London:   The  Independent   l(d)Our  party,  1903.     15,  (I)  pp. 
8'-'.     {Tracts /"or  the  times,  no.  1) 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT:    APPENDIX  47 

Tariff  commission,  London.     Report   of   the  Ttiritl'  coinmission. — 
Vol.  l-i>. 
London:    P.   S.  Khiy  c(j   son^    1901^.-1905.     8  parts.     Dia- 
grams.    JfP. 

A  commission  "to  examine  the  fiscal  proposals  .  .  .  submitted  to 
the  country"  by  Hon.  Joseph  Chamberlain;  "and  to  report  as 
to: — A.  Their  probable  effect  on  present  conditions,  b.  Whether 
any  modifications  are  desirable,  c.  The  best  way  in  which, 
where  there  are  confiicting  interests,  those  interests  can  be  har- 
monized.    D.  What  duties,  if  any,  should  be  recommended." 

Contexts.— Vol.  1.— The  iron  and  steel  trades:  Introduction; 
Relative  position  of  the  British  and  foreign  iron  and  steel  trades; 
The  position  of  the  British  iron  and  steel  trades  with  regard  to 
(1)  The  home  market  (2)  Exports  to  foreign  countries  and  Brit- 
ish possessions;  P^xperience  of  manufacturers;  Alleged  causes  of 
the  relative  decline  of  the  British  iron  and  steel  industry;  The 
export  systems  of  foreign  countries;  Dumping;  The  Remedy; 
The  appendix  contains  among  other  matter  ^Memoranda  (A) 
Recent  developments  in  the  United  States  iron  and  steel  industry; 

(B)  Summary  of  evidence  before  the  United  States  industrial 
commission  on  the  iron  and  steel  industries;  (C)  The  organisation 
and  working  of  German  Kartells. 

Vol.  2.— The  Textile  trades:  Part  1.     The  cotton  industry.— Report: 
Introduction;  Relative  position  of  the  British  cotton  industry; 
'  The  position  of  the  British  cotton  industry  with  regard  to  the 

home  market  and  the  export  trade;  The  experience  of  manufac- 
turers; Advantages  and  disadvantages  of  the  British  cotton  indus- 
try; The  organisation  and  policy  of  Great  Britain  and  foreign 
countries  respectively;  Remedies;  The  appendix  contains  among 
other  matter  Memoranda  (A)  The  policy  of  foreign  states  in  rela- 
tion to  the  textile  industry;  (B)  The  German  cotton  industry; 

(C)  The  Mid-Russian  cotton  industry;  (D)  The  Wuppertal  textile 
industrj'. 

Vol.2.  Part  2.  Evidence  on  the  woolen  industry;  with  analysis  and 
summary  of  evidence  and  statistical  tables  and  diagrams.  Charac- 
ter and  di.<po?ition  of  the  industry;  General  state  of  the  indus- 
try; State  of  the  several  branches;  Competing  foreign  industries; 
Competition  in  neutral  markets,  the  British  colonies  and  India; 
Changed  condition  of  the  British  industry:  The  export,  import 
and  home  trades;  Profits;  Employment  and  wages;  Transference 
of  mills  to  foreign  countries;  Comiuirative  advantages;  Effect  of 
foreign  tariffs;  Statistical  tables  and  diagrams;  Draft  questions  to 
witnesses;  Evidence  of  witnesses;  Forms  of  inquiry;  Replies  to 
forms  of  inquiry  and  written  statements,  among  which  are  the 
following;  (A)  Imports  competing  with  P>ritisii  products;  ((") 
Foreign  competition  at  home;  (E)  Suggesti'il  r((hiction  of  foreign 
tariffs;  (<;)  Differential  railway  and  shipping  rates;  (II)  Indus- 
trial combinations;  (I)  Remedial  measures  and  effects  and  inci- 
dence of  import  duties;  (J)  Colonial  preferential  tariffs;  (K) 
Most-favoured  nation  dauee;  Meinoraiiduni:  The  organisation  of 
the  wool  trade  of  <!eriiiai)y. 

Vol.2.  Parts.  Evidence  on  the  iiosiery  industry;  witli  analysis 
and  summary  of  evidence  and  statistical   tables  and  diagram.s. 


48  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 

Analysis  and  summary  of  evidence;  Statistical  tables  and  dia- 
grams; Draft  questions  to  witnesses;  Evidence  of  witnesses; 
Forms  of  inquiry;  Replies  to  forms  of  iiKiuiry  and  written  state- 
ments— (A)  Imports  competing  with  British  products;  (B) 
Sources  of  supply  of  materials;  (C)  Foreign  competition  at  home; 
(D)  Foreign  competition  in  neutral  and  protected  markets;  (E) 
Suggested  reduction  of  foreign  tariffs;  (F)  Employment;  (G) 
»  Differential  railway  and  shipping  rates;  (H)  Industrial  combina- 

tions; (I)  Remedial  measures  and  effects  and  incidence  of  import 
duties;  (J)  Colonial  preferential  tariffs;  (K)  Patent  and  registra- 
tion laws;  Memorandum:  Continental  tariffs  on  hosiery  and  lace. 

Vol.  2.  Part  4. — Evidence  on  the  lace  industry;  with  analysis  and 
summary  of  evidence  and  statistical  tables  and  diagrams. 

Contains  the  same  sub-divisions  as  Part  3,  with  supplementary 
memoranda:  (A)  The  lace  industry  in  Belgium  and  France;  (B) 
The  Plauen  lace  industry  and  the  export  trade  to  the  United 
States. 

Vol.  2.  Part  5.  Evidence  on  the  carpet  industry;  with  analysis 
and  summary  of  evidence  and  statistical  tables  and  diagrams. 

Contains  the  same  sub-divisions  as  Part.  3. 

Vol.  2.  Part  6. — Evidence  on  the  silk  industry;  with  analysis  and 
summary  of  evidence  and  statistical  tables  and  diagrams. 

Contains  the  same  sub-divisions  as  Part  3,  with  an  additional  mem- 
orandum on  the  spun  silk  industry  in  England. 

Vol.2.  Part  7. — Evidence  on  the  flax,  hemp  and  jute  industries; 
with  analysis  and  summary  of  evidence  and  statistical  tables  and 
diagrams. 

Contains  the  same  sub-divisions  as  Part  3. 

Tariff  reform  league,  London.     A  short  handbook  for  speakers  and 
students  of  the  policy  of  preferential  tariffs. 
\London\:  The  Tariff  reform  league^  {1903\    117 .,  xi  pf.     8^. 

Westminster  gazette,  London.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  proposals.     The 
question  of  preferential  tariffs.     Protection  v.  free  trade. 
Facts,  figures,  and  arguments. 
London:  '''  Westminster  gasette'''' offices,  1903.     khpp-    LUus- 
trations.     JfP.     {Wesf?ninsfer popidrn'  no.  19) 

Illustrated  with  cartoons  by  F.  C.  Gould  of  the  Westminster  gazette. 


BRITISH     TARIFF     MOVEMENT:   SUPPLEMENTARY     LIST    OF 

ARTICLES   IN    PERIODICALS 


1902.  Le  libre-dchange  tel  qu'on  reutend  nviintenant  en  Anoleterre. 

J.  Desmets. 
La  Eeforiue  ccouomique,  11.  annec  {Feh.  16\  1902):  2Ji2-'21i,I^. 

1903.  The  condition  of  England  question.     ,Iohn  Beattie  Crozier. 

Fortiughfly  revletc\  ii.  .'<.  ro/.  7S  (Jan.,  lOOS):  70-87. 

1903.     The  effect  of  corn  laws — A  rci)ly.     Harold  Cox. 

Xlneteenth  cenUiry  and  aftei\  vol.  53  {Fvh..  1903):  26j!t.-27J^. 

1903.     The  effects  of  the  corn  laws.    A  rejoinder.    Guilford  L.  Moles- 
worth. 
Nineteenth  century  and  after.,  vol.  53  {Mavch.,  1903):  Ji76-If83. 

1903.     The  effect  of  a  British  protective  tariff'  on  the  United  States. 

Harper's  weeMy,  vol.  1^7  {June  13,  1903):  995. 
1903.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  polic3\     Goldwin  Smith. 

Independent,  vol.  55  {June  18,  1903):  lJf3Ji.-lJt36. 
1903.     Free  trade  and  protection  in  England, 

Nation,  vol.  77  {Jidy  30,  1903):  90-91. 
1903.     Commercial  treaty  with  Australia.     Allerdale  Grainger. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  54- {Aug.,  1903):  197-201. 
1903.     I'reo  trade  and  protection  from  the  workman's  point  of  view. 
M.  Maltman  Barrie. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  5Jf.  {Aug.,  1903):  202-215. 
1903.     The    history  of   the    policy   for  proforontial    trade.     J.  Van 
Sonnner. 

MLgazinr  <f  eoiiinierce,  vol.  3  {^Scjif.,  I9t)3):    //"7-/.s7. 

1903.     Our  fiscal  policy.     Some  interviews  witii   leading  merchants 
and  manufacturers  in  the  West  Riding. 
Afagazine  of  commerce,  vol.  3  {S<pt.,  1903):   1 82-18 Jf. 

1903.     Chamberlainism  and  Canada. 

Outlool',  vol.  75  {Sept.  5,  1903):  13-15. 
1903.      Home    i-ulc  and    .M  i-.  CliaiiilnTlaiirs  Zollv<'i-cin.      George  Mc- 
Derniot. 

American  cathoHr  </uarterly,  vol.  28  {Orl.^  Un)3):  722-742. 

1903.     Shipping  and  reciprocity:  a  poini  in  llif  liscal  controversy. 
KconomiM  (London),  vol.  CI  {orl.  3',.  I'Jii!):    179(1-1797. 

1903.     TIk'  new  fiscal  pfjlicy. 

Magazine  (f  com nierce,  vol.  -^  (/A7.,  1901):  2(17-270. 


50 


LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 


1903. 


1903. 


1903. 
1903. 
1903. 

1903. 
1903. 
1903. 
1903. 


1903. 
1903. 
1903. 

1903. 

1903. 
1903. 


The  English  manufacturer's  side  of  the  fiscal  question.  Haugh- 
ton  Dickson. 

Magazine  of  coinmerce^  vol.  3  {Oct..,  190S):  271-^73. 

Advance,  Australia!  Extent,  resources,  and  prospects  of  the 
Australian  commonwealth.  Preferential  trade  advocated. 
Sir  John  Cockburji  on  Mr.  Chamberlain's  proposals. 
Harold  Talbot. 

MiKjazine  of  canon  erce,  vol.  3  {Oct.,  1903):  271^-281. 

The  doom  of  free  imports. 

Xational  rev! etc,  vol.  Jfi  {Oct.,  1903):  173. 

The  great  debate:  a  tariff  dream. 

Review  of  reviews  for  Australasia,  vol.  23  {Oct.,  1903):  317. 

Mr.  Chamberlain's  tariff'. 

Blackioood^s  Edinburgh  magazine,  vol.  17 If.  {Nov.,  1903):  710- 
7If0. 

Mr.  Chamberlain:  the  protagonist  and  the  future.     Calchas. 

Fortnlghihj  review,  -n.  ,<<.  vol.  7 If-  {Nov.  2,  1903):  73If-7If.6. 

The  economic  prejudice  against  tariff  reform.     L.  L.  Price. 
Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.,  vol.  7 If  {Nov.,  1903):  7If7-760. 

The  commercial  future  of  England.     Leonard  Courtne}' . 

Guntoiils  magazine,  vol.  25  {Nov.,  1903):  396-4-00. 

The  reconstituted  Cabinet.  Is  the  government  stronger  or 
weaker  in  the  eyes  of  business  men  by  its  present  recon- 
struction, and  what  will  be  their  attitude  to  this  adminis- 
tration and  to  Mr.  Chamberlain's  policy  of  fiscal  reform? 
H.  C.  Richards. 
Jfagazine  of  commerce,  vol.  3  {Nov.,  1903):  355-362. 

Free  trade  or  federation.     Evelyn  Ansell. 

West  minster  rtview,  vol.  160  {Nov.,  1903):  500-505. 

Protection  and  shipbuilding.     J.  M.  Denny. 

Independent  revieiv,  vol.  1  {Dec. ,  1903) :  If56-If.6If.. 

La  fase  proteccionista  del  imperialismo  britanico.  Gabriel 
Maura  Gamazo. 

Lectivra,  ano  3  {Dec,  1903):  1^75-1^90. 

The  fiscal  question.  A  number  of  leading  firms  reply  to  two 
questions  addressed  them  by  "The  Magazine  of  Commerce." 

Magazine  of  commerce,  vol.  3  {Dec,  1903):  515-517. 
The  fiscal  problem.     Sir  Charles  Malcolm  Kenned3\ 

Society  of  arts.     Journal,  vol.  52  {Dec.  If,  1903):  39-67. 
Taxing  the  foreigner.     W.  M.  Lightl)ody. 

Westminster  review,  vol.  160  {Dec ,  1903) :  606-611. 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT!    APPENDIX 


51 


1903-1904.     The  free  trade  revolt  in  Eng-land.     Joseph  B.  Bishop. 
LiUrnational     quarferli/,     vol.    S     {Dec.-Jla/:,  1903-190Ji): 

1904.     La  question  du  libre-echang-e,     Tristan. 

Carnet,  vol.  19  {Jan.,  190!^):  S-5^9. 

1904.     Danish  agriculture  and  free  trade.     R.  A.  Westenholz. 

Jlonthly  rcvUw,  vol.  IJ^  {Fth.,  190J^):  69-77. 

1904.     Der  Iniperialismus  in  England.     Hans  Plehn. 

Deutsche  Mo7iatsschrift,  3  Jahrgang.  {Jlar.,  1904):  SJfSSG^. 

1904.     Une  enquete   anglaise  sur   les  guerres  de  tarifs  douaniers. 
Pierre  Leroy-Beaulieu. 
LEconomiste  franca !s,  32.  ccnnee  {Mar.  19,  1904):  386-388. 

1904.     Le  mystere  du  "dumping'.''     Jules  Domergue. 

Reforine  economlque.,  12.  annee  {Mar.  6.,  1904):  301-304. 

1904.     Le  reveil  du  protectionnismc  en  Ang-leterre.    Georges  Blondel. 
Revue  commerciale,  22.  annee  {Mar.  5,  12,  1904):  3-4:  3-4. 

1904.     La  politique  protectionniste  en  Angleterre.     Yves  Guvot. 

Revue  intei^iationale  du  commerce^  6.  annee  {Mar.  31,1904)  ' 
157-179. 

1904.     An  economic  view  of  ^Slr.  Chamberlain's  proposals.     L.  L. 
Price. 
Economic  review,  vol.  14  {^'^]*i'-  15.  1904):   129-144- 

1904.     Tariff  commission.     W.  A.  S.  He  wins. 

Empire  review,  vol.  7  {Aj)r.,  1904):  236-245. 

1904.     Retaliation  and  scientific  taxation. 

(Quarterly  review,  vol.  199  {Apr.,  1904):  444~4-^'i'- 

1904.     The  political  situation. 

Quarterly  review,  vol.  199  {Apr.,  1904):  623-64^. 

1904.     L'agriculture  anglaise  et  le  protectiomiismo.     A.  Souchon. 
Revue  d'eco7iomie politique,  vol.  18  {April,  1904):  273-308. 

1904.     Mr.  Balfour's  fiscal  policy. 

Spectator,  vol.  92  {A/>r.  )lJ,  1904):  631-632. 

1904.     .Mr.  ("liunil)erlain's  plan  of  cami)aign. 

Spectator,  vol.  92  (A/>r.  3n.  1904):  684-685. 

1904.     Mr.  W .  \{.  Lawson  and  the  fiscal  ((uestioii.      W.  II.  Burrow. 
Bankers''  niagazine  {London)  vol.  77  {May.  1!J04):  693-696. 

1904.     The  English  "tarid"  reform  ■"  iiiovciiicut:  Canada  and  llic  pref- 
erential schcMiie. 
Corarnercial   c5  jinaiu-ial   c/uoiiicle,   vol.   78  {May  7,  190/f): 
1880-1882. 


52 


LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 


1904.     An  open  letter  to  ''Preference." 

Xational  review,  rol.  4S  {May,  190Ji):  1^06-1^09. 

1904.     Mr.  Chamberlain's  speech. 

S2)ectator,  vol.  92  {May  U,  190 J^):  760. 

1904.     One-sided  free  trade.     W.  M.  Lightbody. 

Westminster  review,  vol.  161  {May,  190 Jf):  }f92-If.99. 

1904.     Fiscal  fallacies.    II.    Tariff  restrictions  and  industrial  suprem- 
acy.    James  Dowman. 

Westminster  revieiv,  vol.  161  {May,  190 Jf):  500-510. 

1904.     The  apotheosis  of  food.     Sir  Charles  FoUett. 

Emjjii'e  revieio,  vol.  7  {June,  1901^):  399-Ip06. 

"Sir  Charles  lifts  the  fiscal  controversy  above  the  level  on  which 
it  is  too  often  discussed,  and  makes  a  strong  appeal  to  the  patriot- 
ism of  the  thoughtful  working  man." 

1904.     Free  trade  the  foundation  of  empire.     J.  St.  Loe  Strachey. 

Monthly  reviev),  vol.  15  {June,  1901^):  JfO-oJ^. 

"The  one  thing  that  can  and  would  ruin  the  Empire  would  be  the 
abandonment  of  Free  Trade  in  any  shape  or  form." 

1904.     The  present  position  of  the  fiscal  question. 

Saturday  revieio,  vol.  97  {June  11,  190Jf):  71^0-71^.1. 

1904.     Political  economy  and  the  tariff'  problem.     W.  J.  Ashley. 

Economic  review,  vol.  IJf-  {July,  190 If) :  257 -27 S. 

1904.     The  policy  of  the  national  minimum.     Sidney  Webb. 
Independent  review,  vol.  3  {July,  190Jf) :  161-178. 

1904.     Last  year  and  next. 

Montldy  review,  vol.  16  {Sept.,  190Jf):  1-16. 

Reviews  the  articles  which  appeared  in  the  magazine  relative  to  the 
fiscal  controversy,  with  synopses  or  characterizations.  Claims  that 
this  "  series  of  articles  has  formed  not  only  a  chain  of  landmarks 
showing  the  direction  taken  by  the  fiscal  controversy,  but  a  body 
of  fact  and  of  opinion  worthy  of  the  study  of  all  to  whom  truth  and 
a  practical  policy  are  the  first  object.  In  weight  of  authority,  in 
diversity  of  standpoint,  and  in  freedom  from  temptations  to  folldw 
self-interest,  the  writers  stand  immeasurably  above  the  members  of 
such  a  body  as  Mr.  Chamberlain's  Tariff  Commission;  while  their 
arguments  form  a  striking  contrast  both  to  the  inconsistent  and 
shifting  policy  which  they  examine,  and  the  hare-brained  enthu- 
siasm of  its  supporters." 

1904.     Figures  of  the  fiscal  question. 

Saturday  review,  vol.  98  {Sept.  21f,-Dec.  31,  190 Jf):  387,  Jfl8, 
JfS2,  J,S3,  508,  5lfO,  571,  60 Jf.,  635,  659,  692,  72 Jf.,  755,  787, 
819. 
1904.     Chamberlain's  grossenglische  I'olitik.     Kurt  Wiedenf  eld. 
Deutsche  2Ionatsschrlft,  Jf  Jahrgany  {Oct.,  190 Jf):  39-Jf9. 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT:    APPENDIX  58 

1904.     The  protectionist  movement  in  Enuland,     Hilaire  Belloc. 
rnttrimtionaJ  qiiartevJy,  vol.  10  [Oct.,  1004):  1S1-1S9. 

1904.     Protection:  the  American  warnincr.     F.  C.  Howe. 
Independent  reclew.,  col.  4  (A or.,  1904):  194-203. 

1904.  Ilow  protection  ha-s  killed  American  shipping.     Austin  Taylor. 

[Letter  to  the  editor] 
Spectator,  vol.  93  {Xov.  19,  1904):  793-794. 

1905.  Fiscal  reform  in  Enolund:  the  bitter  stress  of  poverty  tends  to 

hasten  the  downfall  of  free-trade.     E.  Moigan. 
Anierican  economut,  vol.  35  {Jan.  20,  1905):  27. 

1905.     Mr.  Cham])erlain"s  proposals  deductive]}' considered.     Thomas 
Middlemore. 
Economic  revieiv,  vol.  15  {Jan.  16..  1905):   28-37. 

Examines  the  specific  proposals  of  a  two-shilling  corn  duty  and  a 
ten  per  cent  ad  valorem  duty  on  foreign  manufactures  and  testa 
them  by  Adam  Smith's  maxims  and  by  actual  conditions.  Con- 
siders objections  which  have  been  advanced  against  the  Chamber- 
lain propositions  and  concludes  that  "1.  Foreign  wheat -growers 
and  manufacturers  are  willing  to  send  their  surplus  commodities 
to  England  at  prices  below  those  ruling  in  their  own  country. 
2.  Duties  not  exceeding  this  difference  would  be  \yA\(^^  by  the 
foreign  exporter.  3.  Such  duties  are  in  accordance  with  the 
accepted  canons  of  taxation." 

1905.     Thoughts  on  the  present  discontents.     Frederic  Harrison. 
Fortnightly  review,  n.  s.  vol.  77  {Jan.,  1905):  1-14- 

1905.     A  still  broader  view  of  the  fiscal  controversy.     Arthur  Withy. 
Westmiiister  review,  vol.  163  {Jan.,  1905):   1-10. 

1905.     Greater  Britain  and  tariff  revision.     1.  India's   place  under 
protection.     S.  S.  Thorburn.     II.  The  trades  union  con- 
gress   and    preferential    duties.      A\'.     Friiiik    Hatheway. 
HI.  Sentiment  and  empire.     Albert  Swindlehurst. 
Emjnre  review,  vol.  9  {Feh.,  1905):  14-35. 

1905.     Five  per  cent  all  round.     L.  T.  Hobhouse. 

Independent  review,  vol.  5  {Feh.,  1905):   37-52, 

1905.     Fiscal  policy  and  national  defence.     F.  N.  Maude. 

United  service  magazine,  n.  s.  vol.  30  {Feb.,  1905):  J^  1-451. 
1905.     The  working  of  the  preferential  tariffs. 

A'/vV/V/  trade  journal,  col  .',■'.  [Mar.  /.  19no):  94-95. 

1905.     Twenty  months  after.     .1.  A.  Spender. 

i'ont< IK porari/  review,  col.  S7  {Mar.,  lUiio):   333-346, 
"Fiscal  policy  sine- .luM.-,  I!t0:!." 

1905.      Frt.'c  trade  and  the  liibdiii- market.      11.  Diel/cl. 
F(07i(jinic  jourioil ,  ri-l.   I'>  (Mar.,  1905):  1-10. 


54 
1905. 


LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 


1905. 
1905. 


1905. 
1905. 
1905. 
1905. 


1905. 
1905. 
1905. 
1905. 

1905. 

1905. 


R.    H.    Inglis 


The    industrial    condition    of    the    country 
Palg'rave. 

National  review ^  vol.  1^.5  {Mar..^  1905):  lIfi-167. 

A  discussion  of  tlie  Fiscal  blue  book  issued  by  the  Board  of  trade. 

"Free  trade,  free  land,  peace."     Arthur  With}-. 

Westminder  review .f  vol.  163  {Mar.,  1905):  253-266. 

Some  social  conceptions  underlying  the  fiscal  controvers}".     S. 
J.  Chapman. 

EconomiG  review.^  vol.  15  {April  15.,  1905):  175-183. 

Reply  to  article  by  Benj.  Kidd  in  the  "Nineteenth  century"  on 
' '  The  Larger  basis  of  colonial  preference. ' ' 

Fiscal  policy  and  British  shipping.     Charles  Booth,  jr. 

Ind€])endent  review.,  vol.  5  {Apr..,  1905):  352-36 Jf. 

British  shipping  and  fiscal  reform.     Eveljni  Cecil. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after ^  vol.  57  {Apr.,  1905):  615-626. 

The  fiscal  proposals.     G.  Keith  Marischal. 
Westminister  review,  vol.  163  {Ajyr.,  1905) :  362-377. 

Preferential  trade  between  Britain  and  Canada.     Adam  Shortt. 
American  economic  association,   Puhlications.     Papers   and 
proceedings  of  the  seventeenth  annual  meetirig,  part  2,  vol.  6 
{May,  1905) :  310-322. 

Tariffs  and  shipping  trade. 
British  trade  review,  vol.  2 If,  {May  1,  1905) :  153-15 Ji.. 

English  shipping  under  protection.     John  Rae. 
Contemjporary  revieiv,  vol.  87  {May,  1905) :  666-675. 

Mr.  Chamberlain  :  a  German  appreciation.     Samuel  Saenger, 
Outlook  {London),  vol.  15  {May.  13,  1905) :  678-679. 

India  and  fiscal  policy.     The  political  value  of    preference. 
Sir  Roper  Lethbridge. 
Outlook  {London),  vol.  15  {May  20,  1905):  715-716. 


Free  trade,  not  preference,  the  true  basis  of  empire. 
Roberts. 

Westminster  review,  vol.  163  {May,  1905):  Jf.77-IiS7. 


Paul  E. 


The  argument  for  protection.     Hilaire  Beiloc. 
Contemporary  review,  vol.  87  {June,  1905):  835-81^3. 

"Government  interference  with  foreign  trade,  for  example,  by 
means  of  tariff  is  'artificial;'  but  the  State  ownership  of  railways, 
the  exploitation  of  Irish  landlords,  or  the  remodelling  of  the  uni- 
versities, being  forms  of  state  interference  which  Mr.  Beiloc 
approves,  are  all  of  them  'natural.'  "     Outlook  (London). 


BRITISH    TARIFF    MOVEMENT!    APPENDIX  55 

1905.     IdealLsDi  in  protection.     AV.  K.  Malcolm. 

^lanthly  revieic,  vol.  JO  {'Ju/it\  1905):  57-67. 

"The  writer  brings  to  bear  that  important  loiitrihntion  to  all  true 
knowledge,  the  "sympathy  of  comprehension."  The  fact  that 
there  is  no  more  ardent  Free-trader  than  Mr.  Malcolm,  and  that 
no  one  is  better  equipped  than  he  to  tight  protection  with  facts, 
figures,  and  arguments,  makes  his  plea  for  the  understanding  of 
the  underlying  ideals  of  a  large  section  of  Protectionist  feeling  all 
the  more  important  and  noteworthy."     Spectator. 

1905.     The  double  exchano-e  theory.     William  Warrand  Carlile. 

Economic  review.,  vol.  Id  {Juhj  15 .^  1905) :  306-315. 
1905.     A   protected  Australia   and    preferential    trade.        Alec   P. 
^latheson. 

Magazine  of  commei'ce,  vol.  7  {'July.,  1905):  33-38. 
1905.  Why  were  colonial  preferences  given  up?     J.  Parker  Smith. 

Xaliojial  reviev\  vol.  Jto  (July,  1905):  870-878. 

1905.  Free  trade  v.  protection.     William  D.  Hamilton. 

Wei<tmi7ister  revieio.^  vol.  16 If.  {Aug.,  1905):  135-1 1/S. 

1905.  Agriculture  et   protectionnisme  en  Angleterre   et   en  France. 
Albert  Dulac. 
Itevue  politique  d^  j9a?'/ewe??i«iV(g,    vol.   Jf5  {Sept.,  10, 1905): 
517-5Jfi. 

1905.  Fair  trade,  what  is  it?     David  H.  Wilson. 

Westminnter  review,  vol.  16 J^  {Sept.,  1905):  237-21)8. 
1905.  Coming  revival  of  the  fiscal  campaign.     G.  Byng. 

Magazine  of  commerce,  vol.  7  {yoi\,  1905):  3Ji.l-3Jf3. 

"Cost  of  production  the  vital  factor;  free  trade  tried  and  found 
wanting." 

1905.  The  revival  of  the  fiscal  campaign.     W^.  B.  Hoffman. 

Magazine  of  com^mefrce,  vol.  7  {Dec. ,  1905) :  1)35-1)36. 

"The  free  trade  point  of  view;  a  reply  to  Mr.  G.  Byng's  article." 
1905.     Unemployment  and  the 'Moloch  of  free  trade.'    O.  Eltzbacher. 

Nineteenth  century  and  after,  vol.  58  {Dec,  1905):  881).-899. 

"Unemployment,  the  decay  of  our  national  physique,  and  many 
other  evils  which  have  sprung  from  unemployment  have  but  one 
cause — free  trade.  In  tiie  words  of  l>ismarck,  tlie  l)ody  i)olitic 
suffers  from  Bright's  disease." 

1905.  Notes  on  imports  versus  home  production,  and   homo  versus 

foreign  investments.     Sir  Rol)ert  (iillVn. 
Ec<moraic journal,  vol.  15  {Dec,  1905):  1)83-1)93. 

1906.  Protection  and  the  working  classes. 

Edinlurgh  re, new,  vol.  203  {Jan.,  1906):  1-32. 

"The  positive  results  of  our  inquiry  may  now  be  summarised  in  a 
few  sentences.  They  arc  not,  be  it  oliser\('<l,  of  an  abstract  or 
general  character,  but  refer  specilically  to  tin-  comlitions  existing 


56 


LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS 


in  this  country  at  the  present  time.  They  are,  first,  a  general 
tariff,  such  as  Mr.  Chamberlain  proposes,  would  almost  inevitably 
lessen  tlie  aggregate  national  dividend;  secondly,  it  would  not 
increase  the  proportion  of  that  dividend  that  goes  to  the  labour- 
ing classes  in  any  way  that  could  save  them  from  absolute  loss; 
thirdly,  so  far  from  yielding  an  incidental  comi)ensation  to  the 
poor  by  lessening  the  numljers  out  of  work  or  the  fluctuations  of 
employment,  it  would  tend  to  make  both  these  evils  worse  than 
they  are  at  present. 
"These  conclusions  are  precise  and  definite.  If  accepted  they 
destroy  the  plea  that  protective  duties  upon  manufactured  imports 
would  benefit  the  labouring  classes." 

1906.     The  revival  of  the  fiscal  campaign.     G.  Bvng. 

Magazine  of  commerce^  vol.  8  {Jan,^  1906):  IS-IG. 

' '  The  free  traders  have  neglected  the  producer. ' ' 

1906.     A  caiiserie:  more  or  less  irresponsible. 

Jfagazine  of  coin'merce.,  vol.  8  {Jan..,  1906):  58-59. 

"Absence  of  distress  in  the  French  metropolis;  a  comparison  and 
the  fiscal  moral;  if  free  trade  is  not  at  fault,  what  is?" 

1906.     The  revival  of  the  fiscal  campaign.     G.  Byug. 

Magazine  of  commerce.^  vol.  8  {Feb. ,  1906) :  90-92. 
"Tlie  consumer  in  his  relation  to  free  imports." 
1906.     Why  free  trade  wins.     Adrian  Richmond. 

Westminste?'  7'evie^j,  vol.  165  {Feh..,  1906):  115-1'23. 
1906.     An  English  protectionist  on   British   "free  trade."     Alfred 
Mosely. 
Amet'ican  monthly  review  of  revievjs^  vol.  33  {Mar. ,  1906) : 
334.-335. 
1906.  Federation  in  fiscal  anarch}".     Hutcheson  Macaula}^  Posnett. 
Contemporary  revievj,  vol.  89  {Mar.,  1906):  387-4-05. 

1906.    La  rivalite    economique  de  PAngleterre    et   de  TAllemagne. 
Jacques  Bardoux. 

Questions  diplom.atiques  et  coloniales,  vol.  21  {Mar.  16,  1906): 
4.00-412. 
1906.  The  fiscal  question  :  retrospect  and  prospect.     L.  L.  Price. 

Economic  revievj,  vol.  16  {Apr.  17,  1906):  129-155. 

1906.  The  vital  point  of  the  fiscal  question.     W.  Breflit. 

Magazine  of  commerce,  vol.  8  {Apr.,  1906):  257-260. 
1906.  The  vital  point  of   the  fiscal  question.     (No.  2.)     Importance 
of  agriculture  insisted  upon,     W.  Brefiit. 

Magazine  of  commeme,  vol.  8  {May,  1906) :  349-351. 


AUTHOP.   IXDEX 


Page 

Adams,  Arthur  H 19 

Agacy,  Henry  A 7 

Ansell,  Evelyn 50 

Archibald,  Constance  II.  ^I 40 

Arndt,  Paul 23 

Ashley,  Percy  W.  L 37 

Ashley,  William  James  . .  7, 31,  37, 39, 52 

Asquith,  Herbert  H 28 

Atkinson,  J.  W 24 

Autonomog  [psend.'\ 24,  25 

Avebury,  Lord 23, 37 

Balfour,  Arthur  James 7,  37 

Bardoux,  Jacques 56 

Barnes,  George  X 12 

Barrie,  M.  Maltman 49 

Bastable,  C.  F 7, 16 

Beauregard,  Paul 24 

Beck,  S.  W 25 

Bedford,  Duke  of 32 

Beer,  M 17 

Bell,  Hugh 21,24,31,39,46 

Belloc,  Hilaire 53,54 

Bensusan,  S.  L 21 

Berard,  Victor 37 

Birchenough,  Henry 15 

Birrell,  Augustine 31 

Bishop,  J.  B 27 

Blair,  M 39 

Blondel,  C4eorges 38, 51 

Bonn,  M.  J 24 

Booth,  Charles 29,54 

Bowley,  A.  L 22,38 

Boyd,  R.  J 39 

Brand,  R.  H 16 

Brassey,  Thonia.«,  Jst  harun 7 

Brassey,  Thomas  Allnutt 38 

Breint,  W 56 

Breiitano,  Lujo 21 

Broadliurst,  Henry 20 

Brown,  Kd wanl 23 

Burns,  Joliii 12,25,38 

Burn;!!,  L<-.,ii:.rd  .M 2:t,  26,  30,  31 

Burrow,  \V.  li 51 


Page 
Burton,  W 46 

Buxton,  Sydney 8 

Byles,  Sir  John  Barnard 8 

Byng,  G 8,16,17,19,55,56 

Caillard,  Sir  Vincent  Henry  Pen- 

alver 8,15,16,39 

Caird,  Andrew 21 

Calchas  [pseud.  ]  (»SV^ Garvin,  J.  L. ) 

Caliban,  .Tames 25 

Callis,  F 39 

Campbell,  John 32 

Cannan,  Edwin 24 

Carlile,  William  Warrand 55 

Cecil,  Evelyn "i4 

Cecil,  Lord  Hugh 24 

Chamberlain,  Joscpli 8,  13,  26 

Chapman,  Sidney  John 3S,  54 

Chappell,  F.  C  . ". 20,  22 

Charlton,  John 27 

Chiozza-Money,  Leone  George 8,9,  19 

Cholmeley,  R."  F 31 

Chomley,  C.  H 30,38,39 

Churchill,  Winston  S 26 

Clapham,  J.  H 29 

Cobden,  Richard 8 

Cockburn,  ,SVr  J.  A 39 

Colajanni,  N 31 

Col(iuiiouM,  Archibald  R 22 

Cook,  E.  T 19,31 

Cooke,  C.  Kinloch 1 7,  27,  29 

Cooper,  John  A 21 

Courtney,  Leonard 21,  2.'),  50 

Cox,  Harol.l 9,  20,  39,  49 

Coyaji,  Jehangir  C 2} 

Craikanthorpe,  Montague 'A\ 

Creswicke,  Louis 39 

Cripps,  C.  A 19 

Cro/ier,  .John  Heat t if 15,  is   I'.i 

Cunniiighaiii,  Willi;iiii 2!i,  '.>U 

("unyn^liainr,  11 22 

Dale,  r>«iiiaid 9 

Davidson,  .b ilm 23 

Davies,  .M.  1 39 

57    ^ 


58 


AUTHOR    INDEX 


Dawson,  W.  Harbutt 

Day,  J.  T 

Denny,  J.  !M 

Desmets,  J 

Devas,  C.  S.,  ed 

Dicey,  A.  V 

Dicey,  Edwar(  I 

Dickson,  Hautrhton 

Dietzel,  H 

Dilke,  Sir  Charles 

Dillon,  E.  J 

Diplomaticus  [pseud.].    (See  Wolf, 
Lucien. ) 

Dolman,  Frederick 

Domergue,  Jules 

Dowman,  James 

Dulac,  Albert 

Elliott,  C.  A 

Eltzbacher,  0 

Emmott,  Alfred 

Farrer,  E 

Farrer,  Thomas  Henry  Farrer,  1st 

baron 

Fell,  Arthur 

Fliirscheim,  Michael 

Flux,  Alfred  William 

Follett,  Sir  Charles  J 

Ford,  W^alter  F 

Foskett,  H.  W 

Foxwell,  Ernest 

Franklin,  Francis 

Frederiksen,  N.  C 

Free  trade  union 

Fuchs,  Karl  Johannes 

Gamazo,  Gabriel  Maura 

Garvin,  J.  L 18,  21,  22,  25,  39, 

Gaskell,  Thomas  Penn 

Gibbins,  H.  de  B.,  ed 

Giffen,  Sir  Robert 15,  20,  29, 

Ginsburg,  Benedict  W 

Godard,  John  George 

Gorst,  Sir  John  E 

Goschen,  Viscount 

Grainger,  Allerdale 

GreatBritain.    Boardqf trade.  9-11, 

Colonial  office 

Foreign  office 

Parliament 

Grey,  Sir  Edward 

Grinling,  Charles  H 

Guyot,  Yves 18, 19,  25,  26, 

Gwynne,  H.  A 

Haldane,  R.  B IS, 


Page 
12 
39 
50 
49 
8 
22 

20,21 
50 
53 
20 

15,16 


23 
51 

33,  52 
55 
27 

25,  55 
19 
27 

39 
9 
9 

27,40 

31,52 
16 
37 
29 
19 

23,  30 

9 

40 

50 

40,50 

9 

13 

41,55 

7 

26 

20,22 
19 
49 

41-43 
11 
11 
11 

24,28 
7,30 

32,51 
39 

33,37 


Page 

Hamilton,  William  D 55 

Harcourt,  Sir  William 28 

Harney,  Edward  A.  St.  Aubyn...  43 

Harrison,  Frederic 53 

Hatheway,  W.  Frank 53 

Helm,  Elijah 7,19,25,39,46 

Herbert,  Bron 45 

Herbert,  Sir  Robert  G.  W 18 

Hewins,  W.  A.  S 24,51 

Hicks-Beach,  Sir^l.Y. 23 

Hillier,  Alfred 11 

Hills,  J.W 39 

Hirst,  Francis  W^.,  ed 11 

Hoare,  Benjamin 43 

Hobhouse,  Henry 21 

Hobhouse,  L.  T 53 

Hobson,  J.  A  - 12, 15, 16,  22,  30,  44 

Hobson,  S.  G 46 

Hoffman,  W\  B 55 

Holyoake,  George  Jacob 12 

Hooper,  Frederick 7 

Howe,  F.  C... 53 

Huebner,  Solomon 28 

Hunt,  Lewis 33 

Husband,  E.  B 30 

Imperial  reciprocity 11 

Imperial  tariff  committee 12 

Imperial  tariff  for  1903 12 

India.     Government 12 

Jeans,  James  Stephen 45 

Jeans,  Stephen  S 7 

Jebb,  Richard 45 

Jeyes,  Samuel  Henry 12 

Johnson,  R.  Brimley 28 

Jones,  Daniel 7 

Kennedy,  »SVr  Charles  Malcolm 50 

Kent,  C.  B.  Roylance 23 

Kershaw,  John  B.  C 15, 16 

Kidd,  Benjamin 20,  29 

Kirkup,  Thomas 45 

Knight,  William 12 

Law,  A 39 

Lawson,W.  R 31,45 

Lees,  Frederic 19 

Lefevre,  G.  Shaw 27 

Leroy-Beaulieu,  Paul 22 

Leroy-Beaulieu,  Pierre 51 

Lethbridge,  Sir  Roper 29, 54 

Lightbody,  W.  M 30, 50, 52 

Lilly,  W.  S.,  ed 8 

Long,  J 46 

Longley,  J.W 28 

Loring,  Arthur  11 19 


AUTHOR    INDEX 


Lough,  Thomas 

Lubbock,  Sir  John 2;] 

Luzzatti.  Luigi 

Lyon,  Charles 

INIacara,  Charles  Wright 

McClelland,  James 

INlcDermot,  George 

^lacdonakl,  J.  Ramsay 

McEvoy,  J.  :\I 

?*Iackenzie,  V.  St.  Clair 

INlcLaren,  Sir  C 

!>hienaghten,  R.  E 


Page 
12 


26 

18 
45 
12 
49 
26 
28 
45 
46 
2S 

7 

17 
55 
,27 
24 
54 
1(> 

12 
55 
53 
25 
.21 

:vs 

53 

28 


Macrosty,  Henry  W 

INIaddison,  F 

Malcolm,  AV.  R 

Mallock,William  Hurrell. . .   12, 15,  2.3 

Mann,  J.  S 

Marischal,  G.  Keith 

Martineau,  George 

Massingham,  H.  W.,  ed 

Matheson,  Alec  P 

Maude,  F.  N 

IMaxey,  Edwin 

Maxwell,  Herbert 17 

Meredith,  H.O 

Middlemore,  Thomas 

]\litchell,  Thomas  W 

Molesworth,  Sir  Guilford  L 13, 49 

Mond,  A 39,46 

Mongredien,  Augustus 13 

Montagu,  Edwin  S -15 

Morgan,  E 30,31,53 

Morley,  John 26 

]\Iorro w,  F.  St.  John 24 

Mosely,  Alfred 56 

Murray,  David  Christie 24 

Nash,  Rosalind '- 

Nelson,  Henry  I^oomis 22 

Neville,  Ral].li 19 

Nichol,  W.  C ^" 

Nicholson,  Joseph  Shield 40 

O'Brien,  M.  D ■■^- 

O' Reilly,  T.  E 1  ^.  •*•* 

Palgrave,  R.  H.  Inglis 30,  54 

Parker,  Sir  Gilbert 1 7,  2 1 

Patterson,  Sir  R.  Lloyl ".  "55) 

Pearson,  C.  Arthur 33 

Peel,  George -•' 

Perris,  George  Herbert 13 

Petritsch,  Imo •^l.'**^ 

PlHdi)H,  L.  R IJ* 

Phillips,  Lionel --^ 

Pigou,  A.C 13,10,29,31 


Prt^e 

Plehn,  Hans 51 

P.  .Hard,  Alfred  \\' 29 

Pollock,  A.  W.  A 17,21" 

Pope,  J.  Buckingham 13 

Posnett,  Hutcheson  Macaulay r^H 

Price,  L.  L 25,27. 50,  51,  56 

Quelch,  H 

Rae,  John 

Reeves,  W.  P 

Renwick.W.  II 

Rhein,  11 

Ridley,  M.  W 

Richards,  H.  C 

Richmond,  Adrian  . . 

Roberts,  Paul  E 

Rciliertson,  Edmund. 


28 

54 

.  _ —  ( 

31 

31 

29 

50 

56 

33,54 

28 

Roblin,  R.  P 26.27 

Rogers,  J.  1 39 

Roirers.  James  E.  Thorold,  ed 8 

Ko..t.  J.  W 13,20,22 

Roscoe,  II.  E 

Ro-sebery,  Jjinl 

Ross,  ( ieorge  W 

Rowland,  Percy  1-' 

Rowntn'e,  B.  Secbohm 

Ruucinian,  Walter 39,  4t) 

30 

54 

16 

32 

•>9 


15 
2S.  45 

21 
12 


15,46 
29 
39 

16.  17 


Russell,  Bertrand 

Saenger,  Samuel 

Salmon,  Edward 

Sassoon,  IvUvard 

Scanlan,  John  F 

Schooling,  John  Holt 

Schuster,  Feli.x 

Scott,  A.  II 

Scrutiitor  [jiseud.  ] 

Shaughncssy,  Sir  Thomas 27 

Shortt,  Adam 27.  54 

Sinceny,  P -'> 

Smart,  William 46 

Smith,  ('harh'H  William 46 

Smith,  (Jeorge  .\rmitagc- 13 

Smith,  tioldwin 24,  49 

'  Smith,  J.  Parker 40.55 

Smith.  Sir  Swire 39.  46 

Snowden,  I'hilip 46 

Souchon,  A 51 

Spfiider,  Ilarohl 24 

Spell. k-r,  .1 .  .\ 19,  22,  53 

Spicer,  A 39 

Stmchey,  J.  St.  Loe 52 

Swin.llihiirst.  Albert 17,24,53 

Tall.ot,  Ibin.l.l 50 

Tavlor,  AiiHtiu 63 


60 


AUTHOR   INDEX 


Tuge 

Taylor,  Benjamin 17,  20,  21,  26 

Tennant,  H.J 32 

Thomas,  D.  A 39 

Thompson,  Robert  Ellis 22 

Thorburn,  S.  S 53 

Thring,  Lord 32 

Trevelyan,  Charles ., 29 

Tupper,  Sir  Charles  Hibbert 24 

United  States.     Bureau  of  statistics 

( Treasury  department ) 13 

Van  Sommer,  J 49 

Vince,  Charles  Anthony 13 

Wadham,  A 39,46 

Wall,  Walter  W 24 

Wallace,  Chancellor 27 

Warren,  Mark 24 


Page 

AVebb,  Sidney 52 

Welby,  Lord 18 

Westenholz,  R.  A 51 

Westminster  gazette 48 

Whitmore,  C.  A 27 

Wiedenfeld,  Kurt 52 

Williams,  Ernest  E 9,  21 

Williams,  W.  L 39 

Willoughby,  F.  S 14 

Wilson,  David  H 55 

Wilson,  H.  W 14,  21,  39 

Wise,  B.  R 32 

Withy,  Arthur 53,  54 

Wolf,  Lucien 18,  27 

Yoxall,  J.  H 21 

Zolla,  D 21 


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